BLITZ issue 98 from March 1991
Transcription
BLITZ issue 98 from March 1991
Christina Fulton : photo by Neil Davenport ~ 0 ••x .h.ect I.",. . ."'.'••0 CONTENTS 6 FIRST WORD reporting the gulf war, cigarette advertising, tv's indie production boom, vivienne westwood in new york, radical rap, the lulu plays 22 THE DOORS how has oliver stone reworked the morrison myth for the sake of celluloid? by jerry hopkins 30 JENNY HOLZER the message not the medium is the message, by jim shelley 36 MARTIN MARGIELA inside the studio of france's most daring designer 44 SADDAM'S SECRET WEAPON even if we win the war, can we survive the Islamic reaction? by jonathan bousfield 50 GALLERY a specially commissioned work from lawrence weiner 52 VIC REEVES a day in the life of an english gent by andy darling 60 FILM the godfather part III by bonnie vaughan 62 ADS the month's new commercials by mark edwards 64 ART recession and the saatchis by andrew renton 66 PRINT three american rebels by jon wilde 68lELEVISION the month's new programmes by jonathan bernstein 70 MUSIC the month's new releases by andy darling 72 LAST WORD france's ministry of rap; the technology trap 76 CUSTOMER SERVICE back issues, subscriptions etc 78 SEX SUPPLEMENT the ins and outs and ups and downs of man's favourite pastime COVER: Christina Fulton plays Nico in Oliver Stone's The Doors, and '11 111 reprise the role In Wonderland Avenue, produced by Stone and currently in development. She made t he transit ion from modelling to acting via her friendship with Nicolas Cage (which also resulted in t he- recen t birth of their baby). Fulton's career aspirat ions also stretch to sin g ing: she's sig ned to Del icio us Vi nyl, with plans to release her fi rst record nex·t year. Photograph by Neil Davenport. Hair by Jon Michael at Pro f ile LA Make-up by Jeffrey House at Profile LA. Styli ng by Daryl Bir,der at LA Rep, 'PUBLISHER Carey Labovitch IDITOR Simon Tesler fiNANCIAL CONTROLLIR Judy Sayer ACCOUNTS ASSISTANT Lynda Ballan DEPUTY IDITOR Bonnie Vaughan ASSISTANT IDITOR Susannah Frankel FEATURES IDITOR Mark Honigsbaum SUB-IDITOR John Honderich IDITORIAL SICRITARY Jul ia Herbert ASSISTANT PUBLISHER Samantha Stallard OFFICI MANAGIR David McCall SALIS CONSULTANT Terry Knott CONTRIBUTORS Frances Anderton, Steven ART DIRICTOR Christophe Gowans DISIGN ASSISTANT Matthew Deighton ADVIRTISIMINT MANA61R Clive Jordan SINIOR ADVIRTISIMINT IXICUTIVI Tracey Simmons ADVIRTISIMINT IXiCUTlV( Lisa Baxter Appleby, Rob in Barton, John Baxter, Malcolm Bennett, Jonathan Bernstein, Jonathan Bousfield, Michael Bracewell, Brad Branson, Peter Calvin, Catanzaro Mahdessian, Andrew Catlin, Nick Cook , Peter Cowie, Peter Culshaw, Steven Daly, Andy Darling , Neil Davenport, Alan Dav is, Richard Dean, Phil Dourado, Mark Edwards, Tom Eliot, Graham Fitzgerald, Marisa Fox, Kate Garner, Malu Ha lasa, David Harrison, John Hind, David Hiscock, Wayne Holloway, Jerry Hopkins, Aidan Hughes, Phillip Knightley, Karen Krizanovich, Andy Lavender, Lou is, Paul Mathur, Nicola McAllister, Alex McGregor, Merton/Gauster, David Morgan, Eric Mottram, Lewis Mulatero, Callum Murray, Robert Ogilvie, Mike Owen, Justin Pumfrey, Andrew Renton, Peter Robathan, Jonathan Romney, Toby Rose, Howard Rosenburg, Hugues Roussas, Judy Rumbold, Michael Sanders, Jim Shelley, Tom Shone, Howard Sooley, Steve Spe ller, Gino Sprio, Julie Street, Ella Taylor, Patrick Tooher, Rebecca Voight, Phil Ward, Jayne Wexler, Jon W ilde, W ilde and Behrendt, Robert Williams, William Wolf, David Woolley, Jeff Yarbrough BLITZ MAGAZINE 40-44 NEWMAN STREET LONDON W1P 3PA Tel : (071)4365211 Fax : (071) 4365290 APRIL ISSUI OUT MARCH 14th ISSN 0263-2543 BLITZ MAGAZINE is publi shed ck'\'(" n rim es;t ycu by Jigs.w Pu bliGu io ll s Ltd , part ofTh<.' Cadog,1Il Press G roup. Rt'product io n o f editori,l l ,l lld picto rial con tent ill wholt· or in p.H . t is strinly p ro hib u l'd \\,;Hhn u r w rirtl'll permission from the p ublishC' rs. Un so licited riu[(' riJ.lltlu sr b('JCCOmpl nicd by J stJrn pcd add resse d l'l1\"d o pl~ i f i! is to be r(, fUrned ,Ji gsaw Pub lica tio ns canno t .lacpc lily responsibility for 1lllSo hci [ed ma t~'ria l da m aged o r los t in the pos t. All rig hts res t-rwd © J ~ J jig'Saw Pu blica ti ons Ltd. Pho wt ypt's(·tting by M id fo rd Ph o(Qst~u'il1g Li d. Lo ndon W I. Litho by S.] (Urn Heprographics. Srt'wnagl" Hen s, Pruned by HUlH crP rim pic. Distri b uted by IPC M arkctforcc. K ings Reach Tower, Stamford Sm,'(.'r. LOll don SE 1 9LS. Tel: (07 1) 261 -500tl. US Di !!, lr ibutiu ll by Worldwidl' Medi.:l Sl' rviCl's 111 ( , l IS Eas t 2Jrd Strl't'L Nl'\\' York. NY lC()\U, USA. Wap, LI'e. and Videotape Phillip Knightley on the dearth of truth in the Gulf Since the start of the war in the Gulf. the Ministry of Defence has been holding, every weekday, an unattributable briefing for defence correspon dents . This is different from the high profile, public press conferences at which the minister, Tom King , sustains public morale by stressing how well the war is going . The unattributable briefings are to give the correspondents , who are presumed to know about such matters, an authoritative military overview. Just how useful these conferences are was unwittingly revealed last week when one member of the MoD panel was asked how he knew something he had just revealed. "Oh, " he said, "I read it in the newspapers." Nothing illustrates with more clarity how this war, originally billed as one in which the media revolution would show how it had kept pace with the revolution in military hardware , has turned out to be the most news-managed war in recent history, one in which a stream of words, sound and pictures has actually succeeded in obscuring the facts. CNN and the other TV networks have flooded what is happening, cross by satellite to interview their correspondents at the front. who know even less . Then it is back to the studio to chat with military experts who have received their infor mation from the same official briefings attended by the cor~sponden~ . Even the most unusual situation, where the Western media has been allowed to keep a correspondent in the enemy capital (imagine a Times journalist reporting from Berlin in 1944), has produced little hard information. Instead, the correspondent, Peter Arnett of CN N, has been accused in the United States of lending aid and comfort to Iraq. In this vacuum, any scrap of news is picked up and circulated in an incestuous manner until it becomes impossible to trace and evaluate its source , A Canadian correspondent in Tel Aviv watched in amazement in January as a French radio reporter, sheltering with him and several other media peop,le in the hotel basement , called Paris on his porta ble telephone and broa dcast a graphic description of the city under Scud miss ile atta ck, all his details obtained from watching CNN on a TV set thoughtfully provided by the hotel management. It would be journalistic jus tice if on his return to Paris the Frenchman was interviewed by CNN about his experiences un der fire in Tel Aviv. So what don ' t we know? We have no idea of civilian casualties in Baghdad. The Pentagon would have us believe that its bombing is so surgical that only military tar gets have been destroyed . The British government said the same thing after the first RAF raid on Berlin, and we know what happened there. We have no idea how much of Sad dam Hus sein 's military arsenal has been destroyed . The television the world 's screens with coverage of the war but have added little to our understanding of what is actually going on. In Britain and the United States we see TV presenters, who know little of 6 BLITZ British press said that Iraq 's air force had be e n wiped out on the first day. Then we were told that only twenty-Six Iraqi planes were confirmed hits (no one knew the whereabouts of the rest until , that is, they began fleeing to Iran) , We were assured that the Scud missile sites had been destroyed , but this claim had to be modified to " fixed missile sites" when Scuds began to land on Saudi Arabia and Israel. We were told that this would be a short. sharp campaign, perhaps as short as ten days; that the Iraqis, no matter how battle-hardened , would be unable to withstand the technological might of the Allies and that Allied casualties could be as few as 100 and Iraqi losses as high as 30,000. Now we are told tha t the campaign could last months rather than weeks and that Allied casu alties could be heavy, In the meantime , there have been no shots of bodies, no screams o f pain , little angUish , little suffering, few bombed-out bUildings. Only pol' iticians in blue striped suits , war correspondents in battle dress, and generals, using the jargon of the day, telling us that " truth is scenario dependent. " War reporting wasn't always like this . When William Howard Russell described the Charge of the Light Brigade for readers of the Times in 1854 he wrote that " not a British soldier. except the dead and the dying, was left in fron t of the Muscovite guns." Russell was the first civilian to report a war from the battle front and therefore, as he put it, "the miserable parent of the luckless tribe" of war correspondents on whom we now rely for news of the war in the Gulf. Until Russell's appointment , generals had al ways reported their own wars - you ca n read Wellington on Waterloo. They liked it that way because in their own reports they were always brave and brilliant, th" enemy cowardly and stupid. Now this reporter had turned up in the Crimea and was telling the truth. and what was worse, the Times was publishing it. Largely because of Russell's dispatches , the government fell, and the military commander, Lord Raglan , was discredited. As the end of th e war grew near, the generals realized that they were facing a threat almost as dangerous as battle itself. Unless future wars were going to be fought in a blaze o f damaging publicity, war correspondents would have to be brought under controL So on February 25th, 1856 the commander-in chief issued Britain 's first censorship order. It forbade the publication of anything the military considered of value to the enemy and promised that any reporte r who disobeyed the order would be expelled from the battle front. And that , basically, is the system governments and the military have used ever since. During World War I, for example, it became important that the British public should not learn of the war's horror as it became bogged down in a long battle of attrition in the mud of Flanders. But under pressure from the press and the public the Muffled voices: Larry Register In de rigueur Gulf headpiece Army reluctantly agreed to have six correspond ents attached to it. They wore officer's uniform, were provided with orderlies, cars, trucks and conduction officers, and soon learnt what was expected of them, "We identified ourselves ab solutely with the armies in the field," one wrote later. "We wiped out of our mind all thought of personal scoops", There was no need of censor ship of our dispatches, We were our own censors, War reporting followed the same pattern in World War II but Vietnam upset things a bit. It was not a war of survival and therefore journalists, who under America's First Amendment have a guaranteed constitutional right of free express- CNN's Charles Jaco with a trophy from a Scud attack ion, couldn't be expected to bend to censorship, Instead, they travelled freely, telling the truth as they saw it, and - according to the Pentagon thereby cost America the war. In Britain, the MoD watched and learnt the lesson, If Britain was to fight any future war, correspondents, especially television reporters, would have to be restrained, There could be no uncontrolled cameras on the battlefield, When the Falklands war arrived. the MoD had one big advantage - it controlled access to the fighting, So it carefully chose seventeen corres pondents to accompany the task force and made them sign forms agreeing to censorship at source by six MoD "pubtic relations officers", In the weeks immediately after the war, corres pondents back from the front rushed into print with "the untotd story", incidents the MoD cen sors had refused to pass at the time, The intrigu ing thing about most of these stories was that the information they contained would have been of no value to Argentina whatsover. What they did was paint a ,t oo-vivid picture of the war, a picture of two groups of highly trained men doing some very nasty things to each other. If you need popular support for a war, this is not the sort of thing you want the people back home particularly the relatives of servicemen - to read, Britain does not control access to the Gulf, although it does control access to the British forces, But since the Pentagon agrees with the MoD's view of war correspondents and used MoD tactics to manage the news during its ac tions in Grenada and Panama, we can be certain little will emerge from the war against Iraq to embarrass the Allies, The corresllondents are being conducted around, briefed at press conferences, obliged to join reporting "pools", and instructed on what they can and cannot report, In case something untoward gets through, British editors have been issued with "guidelines" about what they should not print or screen without specific MoD ap proval. This is just about everything you really want to know about the war, such as who is getting killed and in what numbers, There is nothing we can do about it - apart from a media mass mutiny, which is highly un likely, Our only protection is to repeat the fol lowing maxim: all governments lie when it suits them and they lie more oilen in wartime, So treat all official news with great scepticism and take most reports from war correspondents with a good pinch of salt. • Phillip Knightley is the author of The First Casualty, a history of war reporting BLITZ 7 Per.ectlng Pandora Can Joanne Whalley-Kilmer outdo silent screen goddess Louise Brooks? Sexually honest, erotic, scandalous in following her natural Inclinations while, in the process, a collection of men sel'f combust. She murders her husband, has an affair w i,th his son, turns to prostitution and is herself murdered by Jack the Ripper. It's not all sex and violence. Wedekind's eye for theatrical effect and his superb control of dialogue splice with an uncompromising attack on the teat re h their time - since the censor's pencil made the first slash in 1906, Frank Wedekind's Lulu plays have taken their p ,l ace among the most supposedly immoral works of the 20th century. A new production is to open at London's Almeida Theatre (March 7th to April 20th) starring Joanne Whalley-Kilmer as Lulu . Wedekind himself was hardly middle of the road. At the turn of the century he was one of the Eleven Executioners, a group of cabaret artists formed from Munich's bohemian subculture. "I have murdered dear AuntieAlice," starts oneof his songs. The young Bertolt Brecht remembered him perform . "There he stood, ugly, brutal, dangerous. He came before the curtain as a ringmaster in a red tailcoat, carrying whip and revolver." But Wedekind is best known now for his drama. Earth Spirit and Pandora's Box form the Lulu plays, triumphs of early Expressionism. A beautiful young woman enjoys a Ufe of pampered abandon, tight and greedy hypocrisies of the bourgeoisie. The image of Lulu was fixed for posterity by Louise Brooks, in GW Pabst's 1928 silent Pandora's Box. That trademark black bob, innocent pOise and lethal allure made her, as one critic put it, "the most entrancing nymphomaniac in film history". But B'r ooks was more than a femme fatale. At once vamp, victor and victim , she had an astonishingly complex hold on the character of Lulu: an independent spirit in a world made grubby by money and men. Joanne Whalley-Kilmer has the chance to point Lulu towards the 21 st century, and she's in with a good shout. Director Ian McDiarmid has revamped the Almeida's profile with a series of shows boasting chic designs and canny box-office appeal, and the Lulu project falls in a season of three plays about the nature of desire. Noted big-league designer Maria Bjornson lends her talents, and Hugh Rorrison provides the translation . Could be a winner. • ·A NDY LAVENDER blames the dearth of decent work on the fact that most people didn't know where he lived in,the Seventies. "I had begun drinking heavily, though," he says. "I used to put vodka into those Gold Spot breath fresheners. That was the thing, see. In the late Sixties in showbiz there was the choice of drink, cigarettes and drugs. I smoked already, so I thought I'd take up the lesser of the other two evils." Salvation arrived in mid-1989 when he met the Christian help· group AV, who helped him kick the bottle. After ten years of alcoholism and signing on the dole, plus the break-up of his marriage, Wild was ready to work again. He's just completed a successful stint as Reckless Rat in the West End musical Heaven's Up, and is about to play Mutch the miller's son in the Kevin 'Costner movie Prince of Thieves. "Of course I've got regrets, yeah. If I could have had things differenlly I wouldn't have had to put myself through such crap. I just want to keep working now, and I hope to get married this year to a woman who stuck by me. You can call me a born-again Christian, for sure. That's what I am.". ANDY DARLING Where Are TheV Now? Jack Wild A poetically pointy snitch, pitch-perfect cockernee inflections, glands that determined he would never rise above five-and-a-bit feet nor look older than a secondary modern first year - these were the foundations of Jack Wild's career. ,His rise was swift: four years in drama school led to stage and screen portrayals of the Artful Dodger in Oliver! in 1968, and the following year, at17, he set up shop in the States, starring in the seventeen episodes of the surreal, pre-Pee·wee Herman show HR Pufnstuf. In 1970 he guested on the Bing Crosby Christmas Show, but the rot had set in. The remainder of the decade's work consisted of guest appearances and parts in movies that weren't released' in the UK. There was a record contract too, with Capitol US. It might have been for a year and there might have been three LPs, he can't quite remember. Now 38, still young-looking if a bit hunched , wearing Reebok gear and smoking Consulate, Wild initially Now 8 BL i f Z luscious louise , ~ ((;~ • 5PrCT.~.,QO!lI(; r-=-1 [l]I.DOlSY~AEDI§il ".' __' Lf I\. 1 t. "I.:' ~ C.\SSElTES;~SDRECORDS FROM FRIDAY FE,B RUARY WARNER WEST END IECFSTFl SQUARE 0~1439 0791 ADVANCE BOOKING 0714943001 IEa ,.·.... r;, 1.1#4. . . . OtlSHAFTESBURYAVE.0718366279 1 BOOKABLE IN ADVA.~CE 8th Ea ".NMOtl FULHAM RD. 0713702636 ~ 1.1#4 BOOKABLE IN ADVANCE I ACROSS THE COUNTRY FROM FRI,DAY MARCH 8th Babes! Jonathan Bernstein and Steven Daly on the starlet syndrome As long as awards are in the air we 'd like 10 nominate our favourite group of the last few years: The Las. No , not the chirpy Scally band , but La Ringwald , La Kensit , La Fenn , La Ryder, La Bonham-Carter and many, many more , Young actresses , US gals and UK gels ; our ladies of Perpetual Promise , Precocious Pedigree and Prodigious Pulchritude - the golden girls who make our lives worthwhile , Just when magazine fatigue threatens to leave us listless and indolent, when we can't manage another exotic teen crime expose, chef du jour or thinkpiece on the perfect sock, along comes a profile of Penelope Ann Miller to dispatch our anomie, The chance of a sacred sit-down with one of these aspiring angels makes a footstool out of the most battle-hardened bully - and why not? Given the chance to kiss , say, Rachel Ward's ring , wouldn ' t you sympathize with her thwarted Shakespearean ambitions? A perpetual moan - or should we say sigh? of The Las is that there isn ' t anything for them to do; sure, parties, premieres and photo ops are all very amusing, but what about the work? What aboul that moment of epiphany when Mery l rasped , "I had a farm in Africa ... " and they just Who's that glrl1 La Ouata. My Mentor "He IDavid Lynchl had me where I just kept tilting my head back until I was staring stra igh t up at the ceiling. I asked him I a couch. And, you know. I was ever snee the days w hen she w atcned movies 00 a ba ttered old black·aod-w hlte >et n Wale-so Il lltVed In a fantasy world breas t feed ing my baby at the time and I felt so natal about the fema le anatomy. There was - Jennifer Jason Leigh ''I'm Just me. I' m not an busy so we don' t see each other that much, but he's always floating around In my psyche." "I hate part ies , appearing In - W;nona Ryder pu blic. l uc i1y, being an actress, I can deal with (efta I situations. If I wan t people to look at me I can do certain things and they will . We all act in our lives. Every day." - Natasha Richardson "It's a qutet neighbourhood 'Nlth dogs and child ren. I'm really eXCIted about it." - Laura San Giacomo Free-Spirit Loony "I'VE' gotten out of some strange woods and am abo ut to asshole, you' re gonna want mE', enter some more. The trees may and I'm gonna use yOU, because I'm the best fucking thing In th IS town," W lCh \vas so helpful. ,," be higher but I'm stronger. r m like a Tasmanian deVIl. I' m going to drill thro ugh them all." - Jennifer Jason Leigh - Sherilyn Fenn "And it's vv'eJrd. because I The Glamorous Ufe haven't had a relat ionship for " I don' t care for LA. I see a lo t nearly a yea r. I've bee n staYing in o f cars and a lot of drivin g and a lo t, just on my own, reading and thinking. And you get to know yourself. I'm not Into, I,ke, a 'ot of weirdness." - Lili Taylor "The bes t part of my day IS Sinking Into a hot bubble-bath B LIT Z w here Rob l owe IS Videotaping a naked couple making love on She has wa nted 0 be ao actress outrag eousl y demons trative creature. I don' rive any Jazzy, unusual, Single kind 0 life." - Annette Bening "I sat down wlt h Cubby IHubert Selby JrJ and asked him, 'How do you see her physical behaviour?' And he said, 'I t's not about. 'I am sexy and I want you, ' it's more, 'You fucking relatIOnship no\'. ' - Charlotte Lew;s Traci Lords - - Madchen Amick "Prince always encourages me to be happy and not to be depressed. Obviously he's very " Cher has t hIS way of helping me let t hings go. Sometimes when r m in a situa tion, I th in k to myself: OK. what would Cher do'" eel good In f ,'I m through never vary. Bookended by hoarse , sweaty-palm e d col- ouring about come-hither eyes, eternal puckers, poreless porcelain perfection , tarnished back-alley allure , child-woman charm and silky blonde sang-froid, The Las plough a well-worn furrow, There 's something wonderful about this mu tual understanding between La and Hack; in the cold, hard reality of the real world they wouldn ' t gi ve us the time of day and we'd hate them for it, but the interview is a healing process for both parties. They want us to like them and we want we really want - them to like us, Of course, should the young actress become a star (going from La to Lady). she's never going to talk to us aga in. But that's not going to happen, is it. "I li ke really quiet things. I like to rea d. I hate pa rtIes. I hate small talk and I'm rncredibly private and shy." someone wou ld normally do tha t. He said no," - Sherilyn Fenn 10 With the Shades drawn and t he bathroom door shut." knew ... But sadly for both the American girls and the relocating Doodys and Hurleys of this world, today's career opportunities tend to take the form of walk-on , lie-down , drop-dead roles . So the prime platform of performance becomes the printed page, where an unspoken agreement between interviewer and subject sees the tem porary sheathing of the critical sabre. Crudely put. she gets to spout unchecked streams of consciousness, he gets to look at her cleavage . It's not just coincidence that each ingenue profile reads almost identically, Grab a random sample and the pattern starts to form , The La at centre stage may be Madsen, Cates, Gertz or Zuniga, but the hoops they jump crysta ls and bullshlt, but I've become much calmer I would then. " 'he says " I st ili do, really." - Annabel Schofield '·1 was so mL.rn fun. That's the a her thing th '" to Jupiter a d I IS ry. I went coot on l upi ter l " - Laura Dern Straight-Up Loonies no way I'd appear naked for a g uy With no bra ins to look at." - Patricia Arquette "The [Playboy) pictures look like paintings. They oUered me a grea t sum of money." - Sherilyn Fenn ''I'd like all wom en in film s to stand up and say, 'I don't want anyone to expose theif breasts.'" - Robin Wright I·ThIS '5 one of my faVOU rite nooks," she says, waving a copy of Colette's Claudine , "It's really cheeseball and good." - Winona Ryder " This will sound funny, but I've had this recurring dream since I was eig ht yea rs old t hat I'm stuck in marshmallow fluff and I can't get ou t. And there's black· and -white N statIC all around me. It's frightening ." - Lara Flynn Boyle "Can you recommend anything by Shelley tor me to read?" - Emily Lloyd " I never even sa'N The Exorcist but I had dreams that things would fly in through the window and come into my body." - Penelope Ann Miller The Naked '!ruth " I read this scene In the script My Philosophy "I always wan t to be an optimist and I always want to believe In people. It's easy to say that the world IS fucked and we're all going to blow U D in ten years' time I mean, give me a break. - Laura Dern "One thing that people misunderstand 'tva'S my decision to nurse y daug hter until she was two years old. That's a par Kula r philosophy! have, and I didn't think an-:,'One would have dared to ask me abou t it" - Dem; Moore "My nature !s to leap wholehea rtedly into somet hing and consume the whole shebang and get Sick!" - Uma Thurman Sources : Derails, Egg, Elle, The Facc, IntervlCw, Prem iere, Rolling Stone, Sky, 20/20, Vani ty Fair c Q) « Q) > u ;,:, .c a. ro Un o o .c (L (/) Q) u o Ul (/) ro ~. E co c .~ (f) Q) o Photography Peter Brown Styling Kim Bowen Ha ir and make-up Laurence Close at Camilla Arthur All clothes Vivienne Westwood Wigs Hairaisers Men's shoes Johnny Moke Belts S-Tek Models Sarah Monrose at Profile, Jennifer Jones at Select , Vanessa, Roger Wright and Pape all a Models One Shot on location at Eagle Wharf Studios 12 B L I T Z Oueen Vlv The second half of 1990 has been kinder to Vivienne Westwood than man y previous years : she picked up her long-awaited Designer of the Year Award (albeit now rendered a lmost meaningless by the mediocrity of previous winners); she showed a wondrous collection at the men's shows in Florence; she was invited to present her collection in Tokyo by the Fashion Foundation of Japan. and a Vivienne Westwood evening was held recently at The Building in New York - an international event which also ho noured Moschino , Lacroix and Mizrahi. Entitled ' Cut Slash and Pull' , Westw oo d's latest collection relies in large part upon her dynamic new slashing technique. Swimming costumes look frayed and shrivelled in the hand. but once on , slashes open to reveal innumerable tlashes of flesh. Westwood is widely regarded as the grandmother of most new shapes. and this collect,i on is no exception. Her absurdly short cotton dresses , slashed and gathered at the hip. are the only genuinely new fashion silhouette to emerge this season . The theme flows through her floor-length cotton evening dresses , printed with concentric stripes in various co lours highlighted with gold ; these may be hiked up. tied ro und the breasts, wrapped with string at the hips . o r left to flow in the wind. A collection for the modern goddess , the clothes are an inspired hommage to femininity, defined by romantic draping, not curve-skimming Iycra. The men's collection is tough and sexy, the knitwear is miraculous ; muscular twists and ropes of Aran conspire to bare chests . trousers have bandy-legged sexiness miraculously cut into them and jeans resemble fluffy white fur in the distance , but on closer inspection prove to be hardcore butch. Westwood's fashion philosophy is to be supremely confident and occasionally didactic , but while her clothes are highly stylized they are also versatile , so maintaining eclectic appeal. They move between low-down, dirty street and uptown, snooty designer tastes. Both palates are equally discerning and both amply satisfied. Westwood has worked exceptionally hard for every accolade received, particularly on the home front ; hopefully the Nineties will see her gain greater financial recognition for her unique originality. • KIM BOWEN B L IT Z 13 Considered Opinion The months highs and lows Most Boring Topic of Conversation The Gulf. "What they're not telling you is .. ,' ! Whose P.og.anllne I . It' Any""ay? Tom Shone on independent TV production companies The st u dio audience of Whose Line Is it Anyway? has just been asked to provide some laughter shots before the show gets underway. "I'm afraid Channel 4 auction these shots off," quips Clive Anderson , "so don't be surp rised if you switch on the TV and see yourself laughing away on 3-2-1 or something ." A frightening thought. But not half as frightening as performing on Whose Line Is it Anyway? itself. "Fear drips off the per formers ," says Anderson, "even the good ones . Not a lot of people say yes to appearing on it. " As Tony Slattery, a Whose Line regular, says, " It 's a baptism of fire , it 's just you out there . You 're in make-up in the hour or so before, and you realize, again and again, that you simply haven ' t got anything to say." Whose Line Is it Anyway? is produced by Hat Trick , one of the ever growing number of London 's independent television production companies , and in many ways it is a quintessen tial independent production : TV at its most viS ceral, its most frightening. You have a camera , an audience and a performer, making it up as he or she goes along , desperately trying to entertain . "The fact that it can fail is cruCial ," says its producer Dan Patterson, " the fact that they're on the spot, living by their wits. People will always laugh when they're tense." It is also an apt summary of the independent sector in general. Originally called into existence to provide programmes for Channel 4, indepen dents are , for the most part , tiny operations , existing only so long as the letterhead on their paper says so, operating as one - or two-person outfits in cramped offices clustered around the Channel 4 offices in Central London. Making it Most Interesting Topic of Conversation The Gulf. "Bring around a six-pack and we'll watch CNN" Self-Satisfied Gits of the Month Jeremy Paxman and Angela Rippon. Patronizing outrage rarely rings true from the cosiness of a studio Most Disturbing TV Presenter Ray Gosling, presenter of Class by Class. Interviews landed gentry and self made mi li lionaires with a Crippenlike creepiness . Gives the impression he's going to chop them up and dissolve them in his bath when filming ends Best Films The Grifters , The Nasty Girl, Reversal of Fortune, Cyrano de Bergerac Worst Film Daddy's Dyin ' - Who's Got the Will? Read My Lips Award Barbara Bush for her immaculate impersonation of a terrier during the Superbowl half-time broadcast to the troops Watch My Hips Award Rosemary Conley, whose hip and thigh-related books fill the top four places of the Exercise Books chart. Latest money spinner is Rosemary Conley's Metabolism Booster Diet (Arrow, £4.99) Yesterday's men Gazza , Bart , Heseltine. Next month's winners: Saddam, Beadle, Vanilla Ice two researchers for Channel 4 would sometimes pass the time playing a game . It involved dream ing up an ideal TV schedule . Jonathan Ross and his producer, Alan Marke , are now heading one of the fastest -growing independents, Channel X, the Ross chat show commission having more than doubled their annual turnover, now around £6 million . And with the go ahead for a new series of Vic Reeves' Big Night Out in February, their parlour game has become a reality, their staff of two now a staff of fifty. The beginnings, says Marke , were inaus picious . " We had the idea for doing an television up as they go along. First you get an idea, a name, then the commission , then finally a pro ducer, cameras , studio and audience. But in c rea~ingly independents are carving a larger slice of the broadcasting cake, providing programmes right across the board - for satel lite, BBC and lTV, As Don Patterson says, " Hat Trick now supply about half of Channel 4 's comedy, and they are providing the BBC with Harry Enfield and Have I Got News for You . They are becoming a huge force in comedy." Hat Trick have also just won an Emmy for Enfield 's Norbert Smith: A Life and are currently producing an American version of Whose Line. Heavyweight Whose Line regular Mike McShane remembers , "When I first walked into the office there were four binders of future projects. I came back for the next show and there were ten . When I came back this time there was a whole other case of binders." Hat Trick's is a common story. Four years ago, 14 B LIT Z Have a banana: Mike McShane and Sandy Toksvlg from Whose LIne Is It Anyway? Pamela Stephenson Award for Apparent Permanent Pregnancy Ruby Wax Strangest Censorial Decision BBC Blacklisting of Berlin's Take My Breath Away because of the situation in the Gulf. The song was, ironically, the theme tune of Top Gun. Life not being allowed to imitate art? Generic Look for American Pilots Kevin Costner Generic Look for British Pilots Kevin Webster Unlikely TV Scenario Tony Slattery talking for more then eight seconds without mentioning sex. Unconfirmed Speech of the Month Dirk Bogarde at the Evening Standard Film Awards. " People say I'm a recluse. I'm not, I'm bloody selective" What US Networks pay ex-military pundits for TV appearances Up to $2.700 a day What the BBC Pay £29.80 Greatest Art Discovery of the 20th Century According to Experts The discovery of the will of Gian Giacomo Caprotti de Oveno, a member of Leonardo da Vinci's household. The will reveals that the model for the Mona Lisa was Lisa Del Giocondo, "La Gioconda" . The world's first art historian, Vasari, stated as much in 1540. Four hundred and fifty years of sleepless nights, and he was right all along Conclusive Proof That Airplanes Have Parents British commander informing press that "we've lost two Tornados. The next of kin have been informed" Compiled by Paul Mathur American-style TV show," he recounts , " but we didn't have a presenter. In the end , Jonathan had a go and we had The Last Resort." Marke thinks that they could only have been such a success as an independent - "The BBC wouldn't have given a talk show to a compiete'ly untried', un tested commodity " - but he adds , " if the Jonathan Ross programme got cancelled we' d have serious problems." On the good side, both lTV and the BBC are coml'llitted to commis~ioning 25 percent of their output from independents by 1992 , and if the independent sector currently provides about 3 ,500 hours of programmes a year, by 1992 that will be around 5 ,000. On the down side, the closure of BSB has caused some serious prob lems, particularly for their main programme sup plier, Noel Gay; lTV is closing ranks to scrape enough money together for the 1992 franchise auctions, and Channel4 has just cut its budget by 8 percent. Down in the basement of LWT, The Word has moved in for the night and is halfway through its live transmission. But something awful has just happened : silence , the worst thing that could happen . Terry Christian looks confused, the cameras wheel , and silent screams buzz around the headsets - " Speak, speak, speak " - but nobody does. "That's the risk you take with a live show I guess ," says Charlie Parsons, producer of Net- ~ • wo rk 7, Clu b X, and now Th e Word . Why do it? " There's an inv isib le te nsio n if yo u do a li ve show, inv isibl e in te rm s o f p ic tur es, b ut in te rm s of a tmos ph ere yo u ca n se nse it. Alth oug h it means heavy a dren alin e - poss ib ly a heart attack for us , for the viewer it's m uc h more interes ting ," Programmes like The Word li ve on th e te le visua l eq ui val e nt of death row, th e ir lease o f life o nl y eve r re newed at the last min ute. Th eirs has jus t bee n rene wed until March 1991. But th e n th is is the rea l a dvantag e of th e independen ts. Because they li ve on th e ir fee t, the y come up wi th the bes t ideas. Th e Media S how. the fir st show to devo te re gular a tt e nti o n to pop ul ar cu lt ure th a t was n' t prese nted, as its m a kers say, by " menopa usa l me n goi ng thro ug h a mid-l ife cris is" , came ou t o f a fai rly inexpe rienc e d team at Wa ll -to- Wa lJ . "The idea th at the BBC wou ld have give n us th e show to do w ith th e exper ience we had is lau ghable ," says J a ne Roo t. th e sho w 's co -crea tor. But as the editor, Al ex G ra ha m , says , " I th ink that it was crucia l th a t Th e Media S how came from a n ind e p e nde nt. " Wa ll- to-Wa ll have ma naged to she d the firs t barrier of bein g a o ne- programme com pa ny. " We a re in th e process of d ivers ifying ," says Ro o t. " Th e ga m e show Style Trial, th e talk sh ow Verdi ct , an d o u r new des ig n show Th e Th ing Is presented by Paul Morley ; we hav e p lans to do mo re of these sor ts o f th ings." "As th e go ing get s to ugh th e s maller co m panies w ill d ro p off," says Fred Hasson , De put y Dir ec tor o f IPPA "and the commiss ions will go to th e bigge r, more resilien t co mp anies ." Th ese are like ly to inclu de , am o ng o th e rs , Wall-to -Wa ll , Mentorn , Initial , Ch a tswor th, Noe l Gay and Hat Trick. Th e la tt er a re undoub ted ly th e fro ntrun ne rs, not leas t be cause a lm os t ever y body who ap p ea red in th e W hose Line fl ags hi p now has their o wn ser ies - fi rst J o hn Sessions, now Paul Merton .' Th e Series , a nd a To ny Slattery/ Mike McShane colla bo rat io n , S & M . As Don Pat terson says , " Th e Com ic Strip ta pped into a whole load of unknow n pe ople. Whos e Lin e has do ne th e sa me. Accord in g to S 'l attery, " Th e BB C do tend to lead fr o m be hind someti mes, Indepe n den ts , th rougb Ch a n ne l 4 - th e natu re of the stat ion and the sort of peop le it a p peals to - are mo re li kely to take ris ks. Yo u o n ly have to loo k ar o un d a t th e glut of compl e te ly sm ug , ba na l situa tion co medies o n bo th lTV a nd BBC" Th e way that S lattery a nd McShane came up wi th the ir new serie s is typ ica l. They go t o n well on Whose Line , so the y we re chuc ked in a room toge th er and as ked to co m e up wi th a series. "Ins tead o f th e usual double ac t suppo rted by a n ar my o f sc ript writers," says S la tt ery, "we go t to ge th er fo r two we eks in a featur e less , dus ty o ld re hearsal room with Mik e, m yself and Dan , a video camera and three w riters. It was 10 to 5 for two weeks o f improvis ing a nd pu tti ng it a ll dow n o n tape - a ve ry exhaus ti ve process . Intere stin g btlt bloo dy knacke ring ." The sam e m ight be sa id fo r independe nt TV. • 16 B LIT Z Radlcat rappers, the Brand Nubians 51.tep 50uIJah A new school in American rap "I'm in this battle for life," says Public Enemy's newest member, a stern political activist called Lisa Williamson, aka Sister Souljah. Her mission? "To unite African people everywhere whether we're in the Caribbean, North and South Africa or anywhere else. My objective is that we build a productive and prosperous community." Taking her cue from the pan African teachings of Marcus Garvey in the Twenties, Souljah and many of her hip-hop peers - the Brand Nubians, Paris, Lakim Shabazz, the Poor Righteous Teachers and YZ from the Blackwatch Movement mix black nationalism with Nineties hip hop to get their messages across. Most of these rappers rename them selves and turn to such religions as the 5 Percent Nation and the Nation of Islam because they feel the names and religious instruction they were given in the United States are reflective of slavery. "It's as if we've been culturally raped," says Derrick X of the Brand Nubians. "Here, our names and identities have been changed." Finding some na't ional pride and identity is just the tip of the iceberg, according, to Sister Souljah - with death rates up, diseases like AIDS running rampant, drug addiction rife and crime rates rising every day, the bl'ack community is in trouble. Souljah, who has done her fair s'hare of political activism, believes in radical measures: "We have to build our own businesses, create our own police system and government, because integration hasn't helped us make inroads in any of these areas," she asserts - and many other groups preach the same hefty dose of separatism . Even interracial relationships are frowned upon - it makes the white person seem like less of a real threat and obscures the focus of a black person's true duty, which is to end white supremacy. Not all activists in hip-hop accept such teach i1ngs. "I thin 'k it's important for blacks to create their own businesses and control industries they're involved in," says SOUL Records co-owner Bill Stephney, who was instrumental in forming Public Enemy. "Butthetruth ofthe matter is that we're in a racially mixed society. And these barriers are often misleading. Look at me, I'm part black, part Hispanic from Cuba. How come my cousin is considered Hispanic and I'm considered black? You can't lump people into categories as easily as these so called radicals say you can." And the irony is that even the most separatist of these rappers are at the mercy of the white-owned media that sign them and play them. "They say they're against working in the system but in reality they are working in the system," says Stephney. Or not as the case may be: the Brand Nubians, for instance, got their video for 'Wake Up' pulled from MTV, even though it was produced by Yo! MTV Raps host Fab Five Freddy, because it portrayed the white man as the devil. Somehow it seems unlikely that the true black nationalists of the Sixties wou ld ever have looked to MTV to get their message out. • MA RI SA FOX mUSIC Paul Mathur analyses the art of persuading people to smoke British cigare tte advertising is the best in the world . Even the most fervent anti-smoke rs - the sort of addled folk who believe that coughing loudly in your face is more hygienic than you lighting up - will acknowledge that. Indeed many of their fears revolve around the fact that the ads are clever and insidious enough to ease poor, dumb human beings into habits more easily started than stopped . There's little truth in that ; the Daliesque Benson packs, lush swathes of purple silk and, to a lesser extent, the new crop of red / white Dunhill Sweet Virginia motifs serve merely to entertain an already converted audience and to give agency creatives an opportunity to pump up their lateral thinking . It's advertising as a kind of edgy art , self-conscious, swish and a darn sight more aesthetically appealing than seeing billboards across the country covered in plugs for Texas Homecare . adS In America, however, cigarette advertising prefers to forgo any notions of subtle beauty in favour of an almost didactic style. The classic Marlboro Man campaign excepted , the general message appears to be : "You know those long cylindrical things? They're cigarettes. Put them in your mouth. light the end. Good , huh?" Notions of sophistication are confined to subject matter rather than the ad itself. The difference between British and US ads is that the US ads have pictures of people in them . People smoking. There 's an upfront image of the communal nature of the experience , of a perfect world where no one bleats about asthma and smoking becomes the delicious fillip to social interaction that it should ideally be. In communicating this message , the ads necessarily lose a sense of interior beauty. Sure, Martboro Country looks a pretty neat kind of a place, but when you 're used to the genre being more than an excuse for a still from a travel show, American ciggy ads come as something of a disappointment. There are some curious delights to be found however, particularly in the American Benson campaign. The agency bods, no doubt spitting nails at not be ing able to match their Brit counterparts, have settled instead for microcosmic soaps , the slogan 'For People Who Like To Smoke' supplemented by a pack shot and two photos. The first picture sets the scene, the second reveals an occasionally baffling denouement. In one a Chane I-clad girl gazes lustily at a preppy counterpart before nestling down next to him and laughing insanely. In another two couples play cards, then one of the pairs retires to an unspecified location while their friends settle into what looks eerily like post-coital bliss. Funnily enough, in both examples only one person actually smokes . Maybe they should change the slogan to ' For One Person Who Likes To Smoke While Everyone Else Goes Off and Does Something Else Instead'. The best of the campaign is a curious affair featuring a group of men bunched around what appears to be a boardroom table . Are they the Benson creatives? Are they stockbrokers? More importantly, do any of them know what they are actually doing there? Could this perhaps be the weekly meeting of People Who Like To Smoke? There's certainly little actual communication going on . Somewhat disturbingly, the slumped chap hogs centre stage. One can only guess at the level of debauchery he is currently regretting. Head on table , vest clinging sweatily to his shirt, Who ara these people? For peoplewho like to smoke... URGEON GENERAL'S WARNING QUilling Smoking Now Greallv RDrlUC&S Seri ous RiSk, 10 Your H ailli 18 B LIT Z BENSON because &HEDGES quality matters. he seems to have extended his lost weekend well into the Monday morning meeting. The guy next to him appears to have some insight into the reason for his sorry state. Is he explaining away his buddy's behaviour in terms of sexual boasting? Fishing? Or just plain lying? One can almost imagine him desperately trying to convince Speccy at the head of the table that "he's never done this before, but then, well, I guess he's never just found out that he's got cancer before!" Speccy looks unconvinced. And despite physical reassurances that he's one of the People Who Like To Smoke, his eyes appear to swivel from the slumped fellow to his pal and, most scarily of a'll, to us. Are we to blame? What have we done? Is it all our fault? There's no support from across the table. Joe Schmoe in the jacket is pretending to be on the phone, refusing to get involved. Gazing blankly at something - a well-stacked secretary? A cigarette machine? A man with a gun? - out of shot, he's not about to blurt out any explanations. It's our problem. We were the ones who said we liked to smoke, we can sort it all out. He's got the speaking clock on the other end of the line and the best pension plan going. We can just butt out. Now. The saddest figure of all sits hunched in the background. Noticeably lacking in the cigarette department, he's exercising his digits on picking his nose and no doubt preparing himse lf for the moment when someone will come up to him and ask for the thousandth time, "Hey, has anyone ever told you you look a bit like Nick Lowe?" But, in his deliberate distancing he radiates guilt. He doesn't like to smoke and now look what he's done, he's killed a man. What will the neighbours say? Will he still be able to hang out with the boys and defer offers of a Benson with the tried and trusted, "Nope, I've given up"? Will he go to hell? And with his guilt comes a gloriOUS relief for us. Hey, it's not our fault! We're tree! We can gang up on him and push him out of the window in a minute because he's to blame. He doesn't like to smoke' He's rubbish! The punch line in the smaller photo appears to bear us out. Speccy and the dead man's mate (both looking like CIA, FBI or some unspecified private investigation team) are laughing uncontrollably at the very spot where the guilty man was sitting. Did he jump? Was he pushed? One thing is for sure, if you don't like to smoke, you 're not one of us. And don't you ever forget it. Magnificent. • I Hate Barbara Cartland on women 5 lib Dame Cartland, 89, is both a friend to the Queen Mother and a Therefore I Am bestselling romantic writer. This morning she was writing her Interview by John Hind 531st book. Now she is lying on her red bed. "What do I hate? I don't talk of my dislikes, darling, Ilike always to look upwards and go forwards. But I suppose the one thing I really, really dislike is women's lib, because it's done such enormous harm to the morals of this country. It's upset the whole structure of society. The great middle class of England used to be terribly moral, very well behaved and everything, they carried the sword and the bible. And along comes women's lib and now we've got wife-swapping, we've got revolting games that they play with car keys. "I had forty-nine proposals before I was married but no one asked to go to bed with me - I would have probably fainted. If a man sees a pretty girl, of course he wants to go to bed with her it's the way he was built by God. But since the beginning of time, women, if they've had any sense, have avoided the reputation of being called 'fast'. That's the way nature works, I didn't invent this. "I dislike crude women's fiction - there's been too much of it.You have to remember, most of these authoresses who write what publishers call 'Barbara Cartland with pornography', have never been kissed, never mind done the dirty things hanging from chandeliers that they write about. And now, with AIDS around, they're finally saying, 'Barbara was right, we do believe in romance' - Women, you must realize, have always ruled the world perfectly from the pillow at home - they shouldn't forget that. "I don't believe in women's liberation. I'm for romantics, husbands, wives and families, and I don't like those who debunk such heroes andl heroines, just because they haven't had enough love in the first place, darling." • @~W@;~ Chief Medical Officers JIM MORRISON took drugs, lived wild and wrote strange, dark lyrics that haunted a generation. Patricia His biographer Jerry Kennealy watched Oliver Stone work with Val Kilmer, the actor who was playing Jim Morrison in Stone's new movie, The Doors. She was struck by the eerie resemblance Kilmer had to the rock singer she had married in a witch's ceremony about a year before he died. One of the characters in the film was based on her and was being played by Kathleen Quinlan. In keeping with his habit of using real-life characters in small parts, Stone also cast Ke n nealy in the wedding scene to perform the ceremony - thus, her presence on the Hollywood set last summer during filming. Things never move quickly on a set and Kennealy was bored, so she started making up anagrams using Oliver Stone's name. Eventually she devised sixty of them. Her favourite was "Lies Not Over". She had no idea at the time how prophetic that was. Hopkins hopes Oliver Stone's new film, The Doors, won't be all "tits and acid" So who the hell is Jim Morrison and why does it appear that he is about ILLUSTRATION GRAHAM RAWLE 22 BLI T Z to be elevated from cult figure to pop hero? Sainted or knighted, so to speak. Is he, nearly twenty years after his mysterious death (some say disappearance), like so many other rock stars long gone, merely getting another shot at the top of the record charts with the help of a motion pic ture, in this case from Oliver Stone? Or is there more to it, and him? Who, and what, was this oldest child of a navy admiral, really? Shaman (as Stone insists)? Lizard King? Pouty, leather-jeaned fave rave of teeny-bopperdom? Self-destructive, boozing, acid-soaked, pants-dropping clown? Or was he a poet and one of the all-time rock 'n' roll greats - America's MickJagger? While he was alive, the epithets and scoffs overwhelmed the praise. Now that he is dead, the pendulum is swinging back again. The reaction was interesting when Oliver Stone's name was linked to the Doors movie project, an idea that had ricocheted around Hollywood for more than fifteen years, like one of those scripts that are too good or too difficult to make. Stone had just won the director's Oscar for Platoon and his rendition of Born all the Fourth of July was waiting in the wings of more than 30,000 movie theatres. Two anti-war movies in a row and now Stone was going todo the Jim ~ JIM MORRISON ~ 24 Morrison story? Was this the third in a triptych of films about Stone's personal Sixties experience? After all, he was a Vietnam vet and once upon a time an abuser (and lover) of drugs. Surely he could 'under stand' Morrison. At first, even the doubters were at least cautiously enthusiastic. I was one of them. I wrote No One Here Gets Out Alive, the Morrison biography that was a Number 1 bestseller when it was published in 1980. I wasn't a close friend of Morrison's, but as a reporter for Rolling Stol1e living ,i n LA, I interviewed him several times, spent a week with him in Mexico, and drank with him. I knew Jim well enough to realize that he was intelligent and complex, and I knew that when it came time for his film biography to be made, he needed a sympathetic, ,i ntelligent writer and director, or at least one with a strong indentifica tion with the period that I believed Jim represented so perfectly. Also, it had been, by then, such a long and twisting road. The biography was rejected by more than thirty publishers before Warner Books took it on the third submission. Similarly, more than twenty producers and directors had shown serious interest in making the movie - Allan Carr, Irving Azoff, Billy Friedkin, Martin Scorsese, Charlie Sheen, Jerry Weintraub, Brian De Palma, Francis Coppola (who had been at the UCLA film school a couple of years ahead of Morrison), the list goes on and on. By 1988, the movie rights to the book were sold three times, the final time to Imagine Films, and the actors mentioned to play Morrison included everybody from Timothy Bottoms to Richard Gere, from Bono (of U2) to Keanu Reeves, from Tom Cruise to John Travolta. At one point, Travolta was so determined to play the part that he actually mastered all of Morrison's onstage moves, practising to videotapes provided by the surviving Doors, who then actually started talking about going on tour with Travolta as the vocalist. According to the band's drummer, John Densmore, the idea \vas dropped because Travolta was too "nice", while Jim was precisely the opposite - in Densmore's words, "scary". 8 LIT Z Morrison was scary, but not like the books and movies of Stephen King or Freddie the Slasher and N ightmare 0 11 Elm Street. Morrison was scary on another, more intellectual level. I remember interviewing Keith Carlson, a classmate of Jim's at Florida State University, where Jim studied drama before transferring to the UCLA film school. Carlson and Morrison were in a play together. "Every night waiting for the curtain to go up, I had no idea what he was going to do," Carlson told me. "He was difficult to key on, because he tended to play the role very differently all the time. He wasn't keying on me, or on dialogue, or on any of the traditional things. He played scenes and delivered lines with an intlection that seemed totally unmotivated, at least unexpected. There was a constant undercurrent of apprehen sion, a feeling that things were on the brink of lost control." And so it was at the Whisky-a-Go-Go in Los Angeles, at the Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco, at Madison Square Garden in New York, whenever and wherever The Doors performed. When, in 1967, the other members of the band dragged Morrison out of his motel room stoned out of his mind on what he said was 10,000 micrograms of LSD, and took him to the Whisky-a-Go-Go for their scheduled appearance, where for the first time he performed the oedipal section of ' The End' on stage - "Father I want to kill youl Mother I want to fuck you!" - The Doors lost their job as house band. Not even the other members of the band had heard that verse of the song before. Over the years, he developed a reputation for trying anything, and pushing others to their limits as well. He hung from hotel balconies by his hands and danced along narrow parapets at the top of a Los Angeles skyscraper, nothing between him and the ground but smog. He consumed prodigious quantities of alcohol, and drove his cars like a maniac. At the same time, he threw himself off stages into his audience, and he introduced long pauses in his songs, sometimes pushing the audience two or three minutes before releasing the pumped-up pressure with the scream or growl of a wounded animal. Watching Jim Morrison in both personal and professional perfor mance was like watching an accident. Morrison dressed in leather pants and told Newsweek that The Doors were "erotic politicians". "I am the Lizard King, " he cried in one of his songs, "I can do anything!" These were phrases created for their promotional value (Morrison later told me). But the media of the hme ate it up and so did the millions of fans who in the late Sixties and early Seventies made them the top-sel'ling band in America. Want to relive the Summer of Love (1967)7 Play the Beatles' Sgt Pepper album, or Surrealistic Pillow by Jefferson Airplane, or The Doors' first album with its seven-min ute-long version of ' Light My Fire' and 'The End', the last of which Francis Coppola would use to open and close his film Apocalypse Now. If the music fitted, and came to represent, the times, so did Morrison. He was the only totally honest representative of the 'generation gap' 1 ever met. Generation gappers were people who rejected their parents' values. Surely they've always been around. In the Sixties, they were more numerous, or at least more visible. But I met very few who never went home again, and Morrison was one of the few. He not only denied his parents' ideas and values, he denied their existence, insisting that they were dead. During the years of his stardom, Morrison saw his brother Andy only a handful of times, and never even acknowledged his sister Ann . (At the time, his father was the youngest admiral in the navy, his aircraft carrier as signed to Vietnam.) Once, when his mother tracked him down by phone, he refused to talk to her, and when she showed up in the front row at one of his concerts, he sang, 'The End', screaming the oedi pal section only a few horrible feet from her face. Morrison also rejected ma terialism. Many other rock stars of the period gave lip ser vice to living simply and close to the earth , but most bought big cars, homes and drug habits as soon as record royalties made it poss ible. Morrison only bought one real piece of property that 1 ever knew about, and that was a small cottage for his girlfriend, Pamela Courson. He bought a few cars - always American made - but usually he walked. The Doors office, the Elektra recording studio, the bars he drank in, and the $lO-a-night motels he lived in were within a four block radius . All he owned at any given time was enough clothing to last a week, four or five cartons of paperback books, and a six-pack of beer. More than the image, more than the lifestyle, it was Morrison's lyrics that 0emented the group's, and his, musical immortality. Although two of The Doors' earliest hits, 'Light My F·ire' and 'Love Me Two Times', were written by the guitarist, Robbie Krieger, it was the dark lyric drape that Morrison wrapped around the group in the albums that fixed The Doors' more lasting image and reputation. He sang of snakes and drowning horses in a time when other performers were singing about wearing flowers in your hair and getting high with a little help from your friends. He urged his fans to push personal boundaries, "to break on through to the other side". He lived on the edge himself, where in true Dionysian and existentialist tradition, he "woke up this morning/had myself a beer/for the future is uncertain/and the end is always near". He told a generation starved of love that "the music is your only friend ". He spoke directly to the ache of loneliness: "Hello, I love you, won't you tell me your name?" And: "When you're strange, no one remembers your name ... people are strange when you're a stranger/faces look ugly when you're alone." He captured the impatience of a generation that was frustrated and angry about the way things were being run: "We want the world and we want it nowl " And you could dance to the music. John Densmore, The Doors' drummer, published his memoirs last year (Riders 011 the Storm). In an afterword telling how he felt about Morrison, he remembered a story that appeared in Rolling Stone in 1981. The coverline read: HE'S HOT, HE'S SEXY, AND HE' S DEAD' The article was written by a young woman who was in kindergarten when The Doors were at their peak. She said the most important aspect of Morrison's continuing popularity was that kids of all ages needed "an idol who wasn't squeaky clean". What this did, Densmore remarked, was give everyone "permission to party. Well done, Dionysus, " he said. When No One Here Gets Out Alive hit the bestseller lists, a Morrison was scary, but not like the books and movies of Stephen King or Freddie the Slasher and Nightmare on Elm Street. Morrison was scary on another, more intellectual level young Israeli immigrant named Sash a Harari optioned the movie rights to the book and brought in Alan Carr, the Broadway and HoHywood producer whose latest hit was Grease and who paid the $50,000 promised by Harari. With The Doors' keyboardist, Ray Manzarek, 1met Carr in the office of Billy Friedkin, who had directed Tire Exorcist and The French Connection. Friedkin said he wanted Manzarek and me to write the script and we left the meeting feeling good about the prospects; but for a variety of reasons the deal quickly collapsed, and Carr asked us to return his money. That was when the Rolling Stone story appeared, which brought Carr back with another offer. This time it was a year before Carr and his promise'S disap peared into the Hollywood hills. The problem was legal. When Morrison died , in 1971, h is will gave everything to Pamela Courson, who was described as his common law wife. The surviving Doors prevented her from collecting by filing a lawsuit saying Morrison had overdrawn his share of the communal bank account; they wanted payment out of the estate. By the time this was settled, and Courson was to get $500,000 in cash, plus a quarter of B LI T Z ~ 25 J IrvMORRISON ~ all future royalties, she was dead of a heroin overdose. She left no will, and when her parents, and Morrison's parents, started arm-wrestling for the money, that threw it back into the courts for another five years. In 1979, Morrison's quarter share, worth millions, was divided evenly between both sets of parents. From that day forward, a retired high school principal and a retired admiral, two authority figures for whom Morrison had no time when he was alive, would control his creative library of songs and poetry and share the vast fortune it reaped. Fiction writers cannot get away with irony this obvious. Meanwhile, Hollywood hovered. ]'ohn Travolta was interested and so were more than a dozen other familiar names, but in every case the Morrisons and the Coursons, custodians of the singer's flame, refused to release their grip on the rights to their children's stories and likenesses. No one absolutely needed those rights to make a film Morrison, after all, was a public figure - but to proceed without them was to risk almost certain legal action. At the same time, The Doors were not anxious to give up the rights to their music, which was regarded as essential to making a film. In 1985, Sasha Harari, who had remained close to The Doors, got Bill Graham, the concert producer who had presented The Doors in San Francisco and New York, to help negotiate with the Coursons and the Morrisons. For the next two years the project was on the shelf at Columbia Pictures, alive but not very well. In 1987, there was a change in leadership at the studio and the project was dropped. La Bamba was a hit that year and for a while there was a flurry of activity, as Warner efforts were rejected, too. Oliver Stone began talking \vith Imagine in 1986, signed with the company in 1988, and was committed to what was called "The Doors Project" in 1989, signing to write and direct. By now, Bill Graham had the Morrison estate in the fold. In exchange for an unspecified sum for the rights to their son's likeness and story, the Morrisons were promised that they would not be mentioned in the film, while the contract with the Coursons specified that their daughter would not be shown in any way connected with Morrison's death, and that the film would not be based on No Olle Here Gets Out Alive, a book they had gone on record as describing as a "vile, despicable rip-off". As I write this, I am guessing that the Coursons and the Morrisons are now going to like the book a lot more than the movie, which is due in British theatres in mid-April. A final cut due in mid-December was still being fine-tuned two weeks later, so it is unfair to prejudge the film too specifically. However, the bulk of the evidence does not run in Stone's favour. Let me explain. Stone flew me to Hollywood from my home in Honolulu ill January oflY90, when we had dinner with Val Kilmer. Shooting was not to begin for two months, but already Kilmer looked so much like Morrison I actually thought I was drinking with him, and both Kilmer and Stone seemed dedicated to re-creating the most accurate rendition of The Doors possible. Stone pumped me for tiny details and Kilmer wanted copies of all my taped interviews with Morrison, so he could duplicate his voice. In June I returned to Los An geles to spend a day on the set. During that visit, Stone permit ted me to visit the Caroleo of fices where I read a shooting script. I liked the script - as a script - but was appalled by the liberties Stone had taken with both character and chro nology. When Stone's name was first attached to the Morrison film project, he was being crit icized for the way he fictionalized Ron Kovic's life story in Born 011 the Fourth of July. Initially Stone denied the charges, but eventually he said he told "small lies in order to reveal larger truths". He went on to win the Oscar for Best Director for that film, but his reputation was affected nonetheless, as he became something akin to cinema's answer to gonzo journalism, where you never let the facts get in the way of a good story. It now appeared that, with The Doors Project, Stone was doing it again. My biggest problem concerned Patricia Kennealy, who had been given onlly the pages of her scene when she arrived on the set to marry Val Kilmer to Kathleen Quinlan, who was playing the Kennealy part. She was told by Stone that he had her doing things in the script that she didn't really do, although he didn't show her those pages. Kennealy said, "That's OK so long as it's not something I wouldn't do." She came to regret that. A friend who read the script called her and told her that she had become three characters merged into one. For example, Stone had her involved in a cocaine-induced blood orgy the first time she and Morrison met, when in reality they merely shook Who, and what, was this oldest chUd of a navy admiral, really? Shaman (as Stone insists)? Lizard King? Self-destructi,ve, boozing, acid-soaked, pants-dropping clown? Bros and United Artists started bidding for the property. But the rights went to Imagine Films, a company started by the actor Ron Howard following his success directing Cocoon. With the rights to The Doors' story plus the rights to The Doors' songs, Imagine hired a screenwriter. His script was rejected and a second was assigned . In 1988, there was a writers' strike, which lasted for six months. There is a tradition in Hollywood called force majeure, 'an act of god', which only in Hollywood would include a writers' strike. The idea is that aU contracts in effect at the start of the strike are extended for the length of the strike, in this case for another six months. Imagine's contract showed $750,000 due on August 1st. Imagine assumed the payment would be extended for six months . The Doors said no. It was one of those cavalry-riding-in-at-the-Iast-minute situations and the cavalry in this case was Caroleo, the company that Sylvester Stallone's Rambo built. Caroleo paid the $750,000 and became a partner to Imagine, holding the Doors' story and music rights in perpetuity. The company began negotiating with me for the rights to my research material. A third screenwriter was hired and, in time, his 26 BLITZ hands, while the orgy came late in Morrison's life and involved a different woman. In another scene, Kennealy asks Morrison how much his father loved him. He holds his fingers an inch apart. Kennealy then asks how his mother felt. Morrison holds his finger an inch and a half apart. Kenn ealy says the scene never happened. Stone made it up. More important was Stone's major theme: Morrison as shaman, the tribe's medicine man or priest. If Morrison's tribe was the Sixties generation, Stone figured , surely he was the ecclesiastic. Didn't Morrison himself say he had the souls of some Indians leap into his skull at age five? Didn' t he believe he could diagnose an audience and devise a way to "treat" it through manipulation (which he espoused when a college student)? Didn't all those psychedelic drugs con sumed during the Sixties point in the same direction; hadn't Morrison actually chased Carlos Castenada across the UCLA campus in an attempt to trade secrets? Or was the shaman just another of Morrison's images, like the Lizard King? The script was full of such stuff and because no one's seen the final cut at this writing, it is unfair to criticize . Even so, the odds are excellent that no matter how good the film may be, as a film, a certain amount of confusion will result. Stone himself implies as much. I asked Stone if Kilmer would lip-synch to Morrison's recordings. Stone said no, because he thought lip-synching removed the actor from the action, so Kilmer would record his own version of The Doors' songs. Later, in an interview, he said that in the final cut Kilmer probably would be lip-synching to some of his own vocal tracks, while Morrison's voice would be used in background shots. Not everyone will be particularly concerned about this, but it demon strates Stone's blending of fiction with fact. Another issue is sex. Jim was no prude . He relished the fleshy rewards of rock stardom as much as anyone else. However, in the version of the screenplay I saw, someone was reaching into the crotch of his leather pants in nearly one scene out of every six. Meg Ryan, who plays Pamela Courson, absolutely refused to perform one of the scenes. When asked about Stone's 'vision' of Morrison, even Val Kilmer said , " It was tits and acid." Where was the poet in all of this? The Coursons had a strong hold on Morrison's poetry from the time of his death and in 1988 and 1990 two volumes of the stuff was published, copyrighted in the Coursons' names. They also insisted that hundreds of copies of both books be sent by the publisher to various universit y professors and poetry contests, part of a consuming effort to (in the words of one Morrison watcher) "win Morrison a Nobel Prize". The surviving Doors themselves were split. Ray Manzarek hated Stone's script and refused to have anything to do with the movie. John Densmore said he had mixed feelings about Stone's script, but chose to remain inside the Stone camp to exert a force to change it. Robbie Kriegerwent along with the band's producer, Paul Rothchild , who was hired by Stone as the film 's music coordinator, and approved the script. It didn't matter. Before Stone even got involved with the project, record royalties and income from other sources (authorized .posters, ownership of a documentary film shown on cable TV etc) had been producing more than $500,000 a year apiece. They all dabbled in this and that, acting and record producing and starting over again with bands, searching for something to take Morrison's place, but Morrison was irreplaceable. So what is it? Is Jim Morrison the James Dean of the Sixties? Is he a rebel with or without a cause? Is he a shaman or a Lizard King? A friend of mine says No One Here Gets 0111 Alive is my version of Salman Rushdie's Sala/lie Verses - an evil book. He says, Morrison is strange; Morrison is ugly, when he's alone. Does that have anything to do with breaking on through to the other side? Or is it just "permis sion to party"? • B L I T Z 27 INTERVIEW JIM SHELLEY JENNY HOLZER PHOTOGRAPH ROBERT OGILVIE Caesar's Palace, Las Vegas, 1986 Jenny Holzer’s anti - capitalist slogans used to unsettle passers-by for free; now her works sell for thousands '1\rt is meant to disturb." Georges Braque "Death is the modern issue." Jenny Holzer ME Oh, the rich: they're so smart. Targetted by artist and populist propagandist Jenny Holzer in slogans like PRIVATE PROPERTY CREATED CRIME, INHERITANCE MUST BE ABOLISHED and IT'S NOT GOOD TO LIVE OFF CRED!T, the capitalist corporations and collectors, the art elite and art-buy,i ng banks, respond simply and swiftly: they simply buy the stuff. KNOW YOUR ENEMY is one thing, INVEST IN HER is altogether more effective: it not only challenges art's ability to disturb or subvert, it derides the substance of her work and questions whether Holzer one of art's most feted subversives - has made any genuine impact at a'll. "Have I reformed any bankers you mean?" she considers. "It's a good question . I doubt it. The first hazard of notoriety is that they just think, 'Oh, maybe I can make some money off this .' You question if you're just helping someone make money who probably has a lot of it already." For one as earnest and politically oversensitive as Holzer, this is not something to be taken Iightly. What's more, her dilemmas are mounting. Much like Warhol, Hockney, Gilbert & George, Holzer is best known for what is probably her weakest work, the provocative, high-impact 'Truisms' which made her name -PROTECT ME FROM M WHAT I WANT, MONEY CREATES TASTE, MURDER HAS ITS SEXUAL SIDE. Having forged a reputation for displaying her work on T-shirts and baseball caps, on electronic signboards in Piccadilly Circus and Times 30 B LITZ Square, on New York pay phones, parking meters and the Virgin Megastore's till slips, Holzer's work has progressed in such a way that public display has become increasingly difficu lt. Not only has she learnt to excel at huge museum installations, but the cost of them has soared into hundreds of thousands of dollars. You might wonder if she doesn't hanker for the .days of 1979's 'Inflammatory Essays' , displayed anonymously but effectively on plain posters scattered around New York (apparently inspired by a Manhattan crazy who filled the Times Square area with warnings against leprosy): DON'T RELAX . I'LL CUT THE SMILE OFF YOUR FACE... raged one essay. THE GAME IS AUvlOST OVER SO IT'S TIME YOU ACKNOWLEDGE ME . DO YOU WA NT TO FALL NOT EVER KNOWING WHO TOOK YOU? "The work has the most impact anonymously on the street, when they're not thinking about whether it's 'art' or not. They confront the content. I try to hit the issues which people actually live or die by." The point of her work has not changed. "This sounds completely pretentious and unrealistic, but, hey, why stop now..." she says with a harsh laugh. "To keep everybody from dying horribly. That's the stakes to me .. . You could always be dead in a second, simply through good old-fashioned political means." Her subjects, by and large, are death (fear of death, nuclear death, sexual death, deliberate death); survival; power and control - political ~ JENNYHOLZER Venice Installatian, 1990 ~ and personal. Fear, pain, anger, uncertainty ensue. Anything except art: Holzer is, mercifully, uninterested in self-referential cleverness. Despite the resonance of her slogans in the LED form she has made her own, she dismisses the notion of making statements on "the power of modern-day mass communications" or "mass-media consciousness"; statements critics read into her work nonetheless. "It's only in the art world that it's seen as 'a comment on'. It's just a good gizmo," she shrugs. "I like the LEDs' efficiency and shock value, their hypnotic quality." Holzer came to New York via Ohio and Chicago Universities, the Rhode Island School of Design and, in itially, Gallipolis, Ohio. Her mother taught riding and worked in community services, her father was a Ford dealer. She could have gone into the horse business, like her sister. "I did some campaigning, in between bouts of nihilism and sloth. Now, I'm just a standard leftie-liberal. A Democrat ... I wanted things to not be horrible but would sometimes decide it was stupid to try, embarrassing. I didn't want to be listened to, no, but I had ideas that I thought I wanted listened to." She "drew wildly" as a child, before becoming "a kind of stripe painter", but now she hasn't painted for fourteen years. "No painting seemed perfect. I wanted to be explicit, explicit about big issues, the burning issues, about right and wrong. Painting striking miners didn't seem right." Her main influence was Dada, "the poignantly absurd, which is the best kind of absurdity". She talks of Duchamp and Joseph Kossuth's billboards giving her "permission" to start the '"fruisms', which she'd pare down after reading the likes of Lenin, Hitler, Mao, Emma Goldman, and "the Utopian social theorists" - "anyone with an axe to grind." A series of "new cliches", extreme beliefs and biases, personal fears and public prejudices, often openly contradictory, the 'Truisms' (1977 -1979) were designed above all to provoke. Truth was arbitrary. Each statement had equal weight, she said, "in the hope that the series would instil some sense of tolerance in the viewer". Initially effective and direct, the 'Truisms' have quickly tired. Many now look hollow and self-conscious. Deliberately pitched between the democratic and the idiosyncratic, the 'Truisms' that are true seem obvious (A MAN CAN'T KNOW WHAT IT'S LIKE TO BE AMOTHER, A LOT OF PROFESSIONALS ARE CRACKPOTS, LACK OF CHARISlvlA CAN BE FATAL; those that aren't seem irrelevant, even corny. Without gender or personality, they had a neat Big Brother air to them, particularly showing in Times Square or on American sports scoreboards, but the tone of total neutrality and ambiguity meant that ultimately they lacked emotional weight. Too many had the shallow shock value or wacky wisdom of a Laurie Anderson or a Douglas Adams. Holzer is modest about their public impact, accepting that it ranges from mild curiosity to utter indifference, but rarelly to outrage, and she deflects any suggestion of innovation, praising the likes of Sherrie Levine, Cindy Sherman and Barbara Kruger ("comrades"), Bruce Nauman's neons, Keith Haring and grafiiti artists like Lee Quinones. Holzer's career, her work and probably her life changed when she was offered the use of the Spectacolor Board at Times Square in 1982. Although the slogans at Times Square were still unidentified and unsigned, Holzer's own sense of responsibility had altered; she found she only wanted to use truisms with which she agreed. Perhaps she "Those coffins are the real me. That's about as bleak as I can get and still stay alive... If you're gonna do it right and you're writing about grotesque things, you have to think about them" 32 B LIT Z had foreseen the limits of art's subversiveness, that art offers only safe subversion. Putting iv[O:--! EY CREATES TASTE outside Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas is a cute irony but not emotionally affecting (to be fair, Holzer doesn't claim otherwise). Holzer is notably pragmatic in such negotiations and has rarely ruffled any official feathers. Although she states unequivocally, "I'm glad the 'Truisms' are over", she still mines them for new exhibitions and a series of 'blips', for MTY. "That's the the good thing about cliches," she laughs. "They're good for all eternity." Television remains the only subversive medium open to her, although as she points out, "Nowadays, people expect weird stuff on MTY." For less than $100 she can get FORGET THE DEAD seen during a local Laverne & Shirley or during the CBS Morning News across Connecticut, New York and Massachusetts. As the Eighties unfurled, Holzer was embraced by the art world. Just as the shadow of nuclear war and AIDS gave her work a focus and emotional substance it had lacked. Unlike Koons or Kruger, Holzer finally justified her notoriety. The 'Survival', 'Under a Rock' and 'Laments' series had a harder, more personal edge, with less of the shallow shock value and smug ambiguity of the 'Truisms'. Expanding her texts, Holzer incorporated the dazzling LEDs into granite benches and wide circles of solemn sarcophagi made to exact dimensions and engraved with a memorial script for the government. The thirteen sarcophagi represented "thirteen dead people children and adults speaking their final thoughts, the most important bhings they have to say. It was imagining yourself dead in thirteen different ways. "Those coffins are the real me," she says with a terse laugh. "That's about as bleak as I can get and still stay alive ... The last time I had fun writing was at school. If you're gonna do it right and you're writing about grotesque things, you have to think about them." ~ . ,/ I , Venice Installation, 1990 ~ One of the ' Laments' starts : THE NEW DISEASE CAME . I LEAR N THAT TIME DOES NOT HEAL .. I CONSIDER SLEEPI NG WITH PEOPLE I DO NOT LIKE. Ecstatic critics described Holzer's installations at the Venice Biennale and New York's Guggenheim as like "a mausoleum of the future", "a drive-in movie in a cemetery" and "postmodern religiOUS art", although Holzer said the analogy between the sacred hush of museum and church was unintentional. At the brilliant Venice installation, a sizzling, strobing LED room nicknamed 'the microwave' for its sensory assault, slogans were flashed up in different colours, patterns and languages. The room's red glow and buzzing LEOs created a fast , funereal atmosphere that made the ' Laments' strangely moving . The clever contrast between the flashing technology and still classicism of the stone, encompassing the trivial with the tragic, finished the effect: ' Laments' was, finally, art that you felt rather than thought about. Bu t the Guggenheim installation was the LEOs' true triumph. With the sombre benches circled in a Stonehenge-like campfire in the atrium, viewers looked up at a 530foot electric board, bearing 330 messages, spiralling up its insides, leaving the gallery walls dark and empty and the adjoining ramps as the viewing space. Contemporanea magazine said she "led the viewer almost hypnotically into a state of existence somehow distinct from any ordinary level of consciousness". Holzer had finally found equal power in her visual architecture and her text. "A lot of information doesn't come from the text. It has a lot of sensations. I like to have it all," she smiles wryly. With the ' Laments', Holzer's painstaking ;Imbiguity/neutrality gave way to frank despair and almost bitter idealism, a development that coincided (or not) with the birth of her daughter Lilly. IFTHIS PROCESS STARTS I WILL KILL THIS BABY/A GOOD WAY. "It's like being 19 again and being desperate to fix things . .. The bad thing is, you add another person to the world, could be one more like Attila," she mutters dourly. Her most recent piece, Venice Text, starts: I AM INDIFFERENT TO MYSELF/BUT NOT TO MY CHILD... I EXPERIMENT TO SEE IF I CAN STAND HER PAINII CANNOT... " It ends, I WANT TO BE MORE THAN HER CUSTODIAN AND A FRIEND OF THE EXEC UTIONER/FUCK MYSELF AND FUCK ALL OF YOU WHO WOULD HURT HER . 'Tve always shied away from anything identifiably female, because people dismiss it as a hormone-mad female . I'm glad I did it once but not again." The recent installations have created a fascinating art, like a theme park in which 2001's HAL has been rewritten by Beckett. "Beckett is sufficient as a model for at least another twenty years. The precision of the language. The big subjects. Plus he's funny, black, sick ... all those good words." She has triedlshort stories, but "can't sustain anything. I get to write one day out of twenty. I write maybe one good sentence every three months .. . In the West, the novel seems to have had it. I don't want to write like Burroughs ... The 'Laments' aren't poetry, no. They're just some stuff on a rock. I'm not interested in poetry, I don't usually enjoy it. Just a personality defect of mine ." Now 40, Holzer talks of returning to the more provocative, less personal statements. "It'll come and go . I don't want to make a career Her subjects are death (fear of death, nuclear death, sexual death, deliberate death); su,r vival, power and control political and personal. Fear, pain, anger, uncertainty ensue... 34 B LIT Z out of bleeding in public ." Her next project could be a war memorial in Germany "which seems really to the point" . She talks of the possibilities of lasers, but remains sceptical about the viability of product p lacement (or pronouncement placement), pOSSibly as a result of Dennis Hopper's woeful Backtrack, where Jodie Foster plays a sort of Holzeresque artist ("she carries around an electronic sign a lot"). ''\' d want an AIDS text on a Pepsi can, or ROMANTIC LOVE WAS INVE NTED TO MANIPULATE WOMEN on a box of chocolates ." Money is unlikely to prove an issue - especially after Venice and the Guggenheim where the costs (estimated at well over $500,000) were divided between grants, gallery, artist and private sponsor. One critic, however, still likened the ' Laments' benches to "pseudo-sepulchers", "chatty garden furniture for rich collectors ." In 1988 Art News reported Holzer LEDS (which come, unnecessarily, in limited editions of three to six) were selling for $10,000 to $25,000. Granite benches for $40,000 and sarcophagi for $50,000 and over. Sales were (wisely) frozen well before the Venice Biennale. When asked, Holzer's gallery, the Barbara Gladstone Gallery in New York, declined the opportunity to refute or clarify rumours of the exorbitant prices Holzer's work is now fetching - despite the artist's populist stance . One leading London gallery described such furtive secrecy as "unheard of" and "quite extraordinary". Holzer herself demurred to the gallery's decision, but commented the prices would be "appalling" were it not for the very inexpensive "art" - the T-shirts ($25), the caps ($15) and booklets ($25). She says she tries to vet collectors, "to make sure, one, that they like it, two, that they understand it, and three, it still travels . It may be completely dweeb-like," she apologizes, "but I care abou t these pieces, I made them ." Still, money does not seem to be one of Holzer's major motivations, and neither does the political missionary element. "I like the mystical trance number a lot more than the proselytizing, the desire to convert," she beams with rare enthusiasm . "Art is a cleaner transcendent than religious ecstasy I find .. . Art does a good job with the mystical fix , you can definitely get cross-eyed with art." • HAN Each month BLITZ., in association with • perrier ., presents a selection of some of the capital"'s finest and foremost bars and eating places,- ------------------------------------------, COMPILED BY GREG DELANEY PHOTOGRAPHS HUGO GLENDINNING L'HIPPOCAMPE, 63 Frith Street, London W1 (071-7344545) Actress Fiona Shaw visits fashionable restaurants in Central London a lot less than she used to. Her lunatic schedule means that time dining out is snatched in her North London locale. "Drink hasn't touched my lips for weeks - only last night," she jokes as the first bottle of Sancerre arrives. Late ofthe Munster Road, L'Hippocampe opened in the West End with great fanfare last May and proved the perfect place for a hugely enjoyable lunch. Fiona Shaw talks with a self-effacement, breadth and incisiveness not normally associated with her profession. But this is no ordinary actress. Critics bend over backwards in search of appropriate hyperbole to describe her Elektra, Mme de Volanges in Les Liaisons Dangereuses and dual lead in last year's National Theatre production of The Good Person of Szechuan. Her film work includes the widely acclaimed My Left Foot and Mountains of the Moon, while her current film is the more commercial Three Men and a Little Lady - in which she plays a teacher improbably obsessed with Tom Selleck. Shaw has just turned down a potential fortune to star in an American sitcom in favour of continued diversification on stage and screen. "This is fantastic - we won't eat again," she exclaims as the a la carte langoustine soup with fish dumplings (£6) and seafood sausage with creamed endive in rosemary sauce arrive. She outlines her most recent role - the directorial debut of Hanif Kureishi, called London Kills Me, "a fantastic project about clothes, now, idiom now, all the language of present" - but rails against the dearth of good parts for women in general. "The lost opportunities are enormous. Generations of actresses come and go, lemming like, lost, wasted and shamefully unused. It's like children who haven't been bom. But look at us complaining," she laughs, "sitting here having the most gorgeous time." The medallions of monkfish with langoustine and parsley butter (£15) are served - delicious and perfectly cooked, we agree. The carrots defeat us both, slipping around our plates asshe relates an anecdote aboutan ex RSC colleague turned TV diva, who, when at Stratford, "perpetually played the 'strange shape'''. For Peter Brook's Antony and Cleopatra, the same grotesque proposed that her tortoise audition to play the asp. We peruse the set menu dujour(£16) which includes baby squid stuffed with fresh crab followed by honey ice cream - the latter we had with a marvellous chocolate marquise. "I'm taking a short break from the theatre,"Shaw declares, and explains how her interests lie increasingly in "dangerous productions that move structure forward in terms of narrative and action". The energy and fearsome intelligence which Fiona Shaw radiates onstage is present throughout our long lunch. We continued to chat long after coffee and petit fours which she described as "a joy". L'Hippocampe owners Pierre and Kathleen Condou have conceived an exciting restaurant. Chef Tim Hughes excels. • FIRST FLOOR, 186 Portobello Road, W11 (071-243 0072) Not another trendier-than-thou Notting Hill h.1I1gout for rich kids dressed by Stussy. RathC'r a genuinely welcoming bar, dining room and private room with an exciting cooperative feel. First Floor is in fact the Colville Rose successfully rethought by ex manager of192 Pete Cross and Glyn Baker (son of cinema he-man Stanley). Although it has been open six months, the place is still evolving with workmen upstairs, downstairs and, literally, in the lady's chamber. Thankfully, it looks set to avoid sanitization in favour of main taining a relaxed, almost deshabille ambience. The theme on all floors is Bacchic and Saturnalian without the gothic operatics of the neighbouring Market Bar. The dining room is cool, painted powder blue and mottled cream. The stuccoed ceiling, chandelier and swagged windows offset the relative formality of the white linen table settings. The menu changes daily, although good mussels with lemon grass and basil (£5), fried scallops, cashew nuts with pOllsse epinard (£5) and roast pheasant with saffron risotto (£10) give an idea ofthe chefs range and ambitions. Puddings. including an excellent chocolate and mint ice cream with shortbread, arc all £2.80 and the Cuban Cocktail of mint, rum and crushed ice makes a WIcked, upmarket slush puppy. • TAMPOPO, 233 Earls Court Road, SW5 (071-373 5400) Transformed last NO\'cmber from a dull pasta house, the interior is now an oasis of casudl chic in an increasingly forlorn Earls Court. Video monitors are strategically placC'd so diners can enjoy MTV, TcllllPOP" (the film ) or the kind of Japanese cult movie so loved by Jonathan Ross. The menu is short with the usual selection ofJapanese pickles, salads and noodle soups. Grilled Teriyaki fish of the day (G. 50) is the most expensive itt'm listed, but feeling fragile aftn the night before Iopted for th e sushi and sashimi for their allegedly restorative powers. The nigiri and naki sushi (1:3.90) was fresh and substanti:rl and the sashimi with salmon roe (£5.80) good. And Tampopo has a well stocked bar: a good selection of Japanese beers, liqueurs and fairly priced wines are available for those too gingerly to sample the bewildering Jrray of sakes. For those in search of Zen through the perfect noodle soup, Tampopo IS as pleasant and inexpensive a place as you're likely to tind. In SW5 at least. • B LI T Z 35 Martin Margiela champions the seamy side of French fashion Photography Michael Sanders REPORT REBECCA VOIGHT J Martin Margiela won't talk to the press and would rather show his clothes in a parking lot than on a catwalk. Yet for all his attempts to eschew glitz, Margiela is a star. He estab lished a cult following almost instan taneously after his first show for the autumn/winter 1989 season and today he is Paris's favourite down home, funky fashion designer. Margiela's models don't prance down the catwalk at his shows because he believes it's better not to put fashion on a pedestal. And Margiela and his staff, dressed in lab coats, become part of the show, leaving, industry guests - who are usually standing looking more like a human maze than a fashion audience. His twice-yearly happenings are also notable for their offbeat locations: Paris's basement meeting hall and sometime club, EI Globo, a vacant lot in the seedy 20th arrondissement (a choice sharply criticized as "exploitative" by one Paris daily), and a bombed-out parking garage where the mod els, crew and audience drank red wine out of plastic cups at the post-show party shocking by Paris standards. Once part of Jean Paul Gaultier's team, the forty ish Belgian designer says he won't talk to the press because he would rather draw attention to the clothes than to himself. Whether or not this is a pose, his label, a naked white square of fabric, certainly holds to his 'no autographs please' stance. Although his models wear black-eye style mascara and falling down hair, and many of the clothes look like they've been through the destruct cycle of God's washing machine, you shouldn't be tempted to call Margiela's look "destroy" chic. He is, underneath the frayed edges and peeling white-painted boots, quite a romantic. Last season, his girls walked in a sea of rose petals wearing patchouli oil and no lipstick; it was like street wise IBotticelli. In his hands, a butcher'S apron turns into a slinky dress with permanent cupboard pleats, old tulle ballgowns are recoloured and pieced into jackets to wear over T-shirts, papier-milche is worked into a bustier as delicate as broken eggshells, loose threads are left hanging like dangling bits of spider web, old denims are patched together for new jackets and ancient linings are exposed, seams and all, for the slinkiest of dresses. Margiela thinks the inside of clothes should be as interesting as the outside, which is why his style is often inside out. His ideas have spawned a host of interpreters - fashion students who raid flea markets to style their own versions of his dusty chic. Margiela is the only designer taking Paris by storm at the moment, but while he is available there at Galeries Lafayette, Ka shiyma and L'Eciaireur. he has yet to find an outlet in England. If his success continues it will Signal the end of luxury, megalomania and designer overkill for the Nineties•• J B L i T Z 39 40 BLITZ .-. • SADDAM's Secret Wea Behind Saddam's chemical and Scud potential lies a more implacable threat: Islamic fundamentalist sympathy for Iraq. Even if the West wins the war, the mullahs could ensnre that it loses the peace ISLAMI 44 BLITZ REPORT JONATHAN BOUSFIELD "Is the Middle Eastern war the beginning of Armageddon as predicted in the Christian Bible?" asked Cable News Network at the start of the hostilities ill the Gulf. "Seventy-six percent of Americans say no." Although it is hard not to be worried about the pessimistic 24 percent, this was one of the more comforting items of information to emerge from CNN's war coverage in January. For the time being, an apocalyptic interpretation of the current conflict remains relegated to a rear chamber of the Western psyche. Nonetheless, there are growing fears that Sad dam Hussein's "mother of all battles" may form the opening chapter to a still more serious global struggle between Christian and Muslim. Most significantly, the Gulf crisis has highlighted a worldwide mobilization of Muslim consciousness which is likely to complicate Western relations with the Middle East for decades to come. The responsibility for fanning the flames of this animosity lies on both sides. Regional political leaders vying for leadership of a turbulent Middle East have spent the last decade playing on popular resentment of the rich West, and also calculating that judicious use of words like jihad will send Westerners scurrying for the bunkers. At the same time, Western powers have displayed a certain amount of arrogance in their dealings with the poverty-stricken Third Worl d , and an unwillingness to come to terms with the roots of its discontents. The "civilized" West has always measured itself against the supposed barbarisms it has had to come up against; now that communism is no longer around to play the role of bogeyman, it is almost as if we are casting around to find a new source of illiberalism aga inst which we can prove our own virtue. It's difficult to tell whether the current state of heightened radical ~ 8 LIT Z 45 ISIL AM Bloody Sunday In Beirut: rescue workers sift through the rubble after the kamikaze attack on the US marine base In October 1983 ~ Islamic sentiment is transient or a more long-lasting expression of general anti-Western ism , but for the time being the passions generated will make the establishment of post-conflict stability in the Middle East very problematic indeed. Coming at the end of a decade in which Gadaffi-ins pired terrorism, internecine conflict in the Lebanon, Iranian radicalism and the Rushdie affair all served to establish a caricature of Muslim extremism firmly in Western demonology, the current crisis can only wide n the gulf in understanding between Western and Muslim cultures . When on August 10th last year Saddam Hussein issued the first of many appeal s for a holy war against Americans and Israelis, few observers took his words all that seriously. It seemed patently ludicrous that the leader of an avowedly secular regime - which silenced many of its own religious leaders before spending eight years waging war on fellow believers in Iran - could lay an y serious claim to Muslim loyalties. Equally difficult to swallow at the time was the idea that the Iraqi president's grab for Kuwait somehow constituted the first step in this heroic struggle. In the event, however, Islamic solidarity has proved surprisingly strong. Pro-Iraqi demonstrations across the Arab world, notably in Jordan and North Africa , have shown the strength of anti-Western sentiment. Even among members of the anti-Saddam coalition such as Egypt and Syria, Iraq's ability to'strike at Israel has been the subject of much popular satisfaction. More significantly, Saddam's stand against the West has won Iraq sympathy among non-Arab Muslims, regardless of ethnic and sectarian differences. Iranian public opinion finds its eagerness to be rid of erstwhile adversary Saddam Hussein tempered by concern for Muslims suffering beneath the allied air bombardment of Iraq . Closer to home, the Supreme Council of British Muslims brought together 200 religious leaders on January 21st to call for an immediate with drawal of all non-Muslim forces from the Gulf. The danger is that the reduction of Iraq to rubble, along with existing frustration over the Palestinian question, will be taken as an affront to all Muslims, generating feelings of wounded dignity which will live on in the collective memory long after Saddam Hussein himself has been forgotten. For Muslims of all races who share a common heritage of colonialism, the spectacle of a US-dominated force acting out the role of global policeman, whether sanctified by the robes of a UN mandate or not, looks suspiciously like the second coming of Western imperialism. Saddam's appeal to Muslim loyalties over and above his customary pan-Arabism shows the extent to which the language of Middle Eastern political life has become infused with religious rhetoric. The last decade has seen a resurgence of Islamic militancy in the region which has proved increasingly successful in articulating Arab aspir ations. Fundamentalism is in the ascendant, offering the most thorough-going critique of the area's existing regimes and the major source of inspiration to the young . Modern fundamentalism - and the name itself is a Western label 46 BLITZ (Muslims find it a little pejorative) - began as a reaction to colonialism and a response to the problem of how to rejuvenate societies which had been penetrated by a militarily and economically superior West. In the post-colonial era many Middle Eastern frustrations were channelled into largely secularist modernizing movements - many of which, although often anti-Western in character, had their roots in the Western intellectual tradition: hard line socialism in Algeria, Nasserist Pan-Arabism in Egypt, Ba'athist National Socialism in Syria and Iraq or centralizing monarchy in Iran . The failure of regimes such as these to deal with the fundament ,~ l problems of the area - a process highlighted by the decline of Nasser's Egypt, the bearer of Arab hopes in the Fifties and Sixties and their all too frequent descent into misgovernment and corruption, left Muslim societies still searching for a post-colonial identity. In these circumstances the simplicity of fundamentalist doctrine - the idea that a revival of Islam in its original purity is the only sound basis on which a sense of identity can be built - has proved most persuasive. According to Dr Zaki, a Middle Eastern expert at the pro-Iranian Muslim Institute, "When we speak of an Islamic resurgence it is in fact a misnomer. What's happening is merely a return to the state occupied prior to the intrusion of Western powers on these societies. All countries that were touched by colonialism should be able to return to what they were." decade has not been one of rising living standards and growing social mobility, and the resulting frustrations playa large part in explaining the growth of militant Islam . The oil-rich Gulf countries apart, all the states in the region face broadly similar problems of economic underdevelopment, mounting foreign debts, urban overcrowding, soaring birth rates and subservience to a world iinancial system over which they have little real influence. The effects of a changing demographic structure help to place current discontent in context; 60 percent of the North African popu1lation, for example, is estimated to be under the age of 21, a situation echoed right across the Muslim world. The economies of many of these states are scarcely growing at all, never mind fast enough to provide all these people with jobs. Periodic bursts of part time employment are the best that many of them can hope for. However, the bedrock of fundamentalist support doesn't nec cessarily come from !the urban poor. The most vocal expressions of anti-Westernism often come from the traditional middle classes of traders and merchan·ts whose businesses have suffered as a result of mass-produced Western imports, or the arrival of such symbols of Western culture as supermarkets and chain stores. They also share a niggling resentment towards the new middle class of Westernized technocrats, who seem to represent the alien culture which is displacing them. Hence their natural alliance with the religious classes, who are them selves threatened by the advance of Westerninspired secularizing tendencies. Most accounts of the Iranian revolution identify the bazaar merchants and artisans of south Tehran as the group forming the largest proportion of the vast demonstrations of late 1978, which finally persuaded the Shah to quit. In the early Eighties fundamentalist groups, often composed of radical students and inspired by the example of revolutionary Iran , saw armed struggle as the way to change things, a policy characterized by the assassination ot Egypt's President Sadat in 1981. However, this did little to alter the status quo, and there was a return to a more moderate strategy. Saudi Arabia emerged as the main backer of Muslim political groups in the region, hoping to outflank Iranian pretensions to the spiritual leadership of resurgent Islam. In the long run, Arab-Persian enmity and differences between Sunni and Shiah prevented Iranian fundamentalism from becoming the global force that many people feared. However Saudi Arabia's close ties with the West, thrown into stark relief by the current crisis, have rendered the Saudis incapable of striking at the real targets of Muslim unrest - Palestine, growing poverty and increasing penetration by Western economic interests. Inevitably this has ~ Iranian ;p ublic opinion finds its eagerness to be rid of erstwhile adversary Saddam Hussein tempered by concern for Muslim,s suffering beneath the allied air bombardment of Iraq With the continuing Israeli occupation of the West Bank acting as its most compelling symbol, the reaction to colonialism remains a powerful, emotive force. The borders dividing the Middle Eastern Arab states, sketched out by the British and French in the wake of the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, have never been regarded as 'l egitimate in the eyes of many Arabs, who argue that the Middle East was carved up arbitrarily in order to keep Arabs divided and frustrate their aspirations. This helps to explain why Saddam's disregard for these borders in invading Kuwai t found a certai n degree of popular approval among the Arab masses. Economic problems are often seen as yet another aspect of the colonial legacy. For a large percentage of the world population the last B LIT Z 47 ISLAM m '" X ~ m ~ C '"m '" ~ damaged their standing as leaders of Muslim opinion. Ironically, the militant followers of movements funded by the Saudis now demonstrate in support of Saddam. In a Middle East fun of autocracies, one-party states and tribal monarchies, the fundamentalist parties have in recent years been at the forefront of calls for democratization. The most dramatic indicator of the changing poIiticallandscape came in last June's local councj,J elections in Algeria, which despite making little impact on the front pages of British newspapers, may in the long run prove to have as profound an effect on the Muslim world as anything yet accomplished by Saddam Hussein. In what were arguably the freest elections yet held in an Arab country, the Islamic Salvation Front (Front IsIamique dll Sahli, or FIS), WOn a comprehensive victory. The victims of this upsurge in Muslim militancy were the National Liberation Front or FLN, whose austere monolithic rule had guided Algeria, after eight heroic years of warfare with the occupying French, toward a familiar quagmire of bureaucratic inefficiency, corruption and economic decline. Urban food riots in October 1988 were put down in bloody fashion, sapping the divided FLN's will to rule and forcing President Chadli Benjedid to open the door tentatively to multi-party politics . The aims ofFIS are 48 B LIT Z quite simple: full application of the Sharia, or Islamic law, and the unification of the world Islamic community. In practical electoral terms they appeal to a vast army of urban poor and un employed youth, for whom the moral simplicity and purity implied by a return to Islamic values stands in stark contrast to the dead end of Algerian socialism. Events in Algeria are being anxiously followed in neighbouring Tunisia, where the Islamic opposition party Ennahda constitutes the major threat to the near-monopoly of the ruling Democratic Constitutional Union. Ennahda's publishing activities have faced harrassment, their newspaper Al Fajr being suspended for three months last autumn, and over 100 'sympathizers' of the movement were charged in Decemberwith belonging to an armed group plotting to overthrow the state. The government has been gradually retreating from its traditionally pro-Western foreign policy ever since last August, in an attempt to retain the confidence of the pro-Iraqi populace, while at the same time continuing to paint Ennahda as an extremist threat to civil liberties. Despite President Mubarak's recent claims that his country has the Arab world's most democratic political system , Egypt has a long tradition of stage-managing elections. Those of November last year were boycotted by liberal constitutionalists and Islamic parties alike . Egypt was the birthplace of the oldest of the modern Islamic organizations, the Muslim Brotherhood, which has been campaigning against the secularization of society since the Thirties. Now the Brotherhood has branches all over the Arab world; with a tradition of clandestine activity in states such as Syria and Iraq. The Brotherhood is legal in Jordan, where it received twenty seats ,in the elections of November 1989, King Hussein's first tentative steps towards democratization; five of their number were brought into the cabinet in January 1991 in recognition of the upsurge in religious fact that they were allowed to organize themselves politically at a time when many competing groups were constrained. "Secular politicians argue that they would be able to present a reasonable showing in the fullness of time. The present crisis has undercut the process in Jordan and radicalism has swept the board." One consequence of eventual allied victory in the current conflict may be to give added impetus to the process of democratization, especially following criticism of the ossified political systems we are supposedly fighting to defend. Islamic parties may well be the most immediate beneficiaries. The dlynamics ot such a process would certainly produce unexpected results which would by no means be welcome to the Arab regimes currently supporting the anti-Iraqi coalition. As Dr Hollis points out: "There may be a distinction between what ex i sting governments have in mind and what populist parties have in mind. It wou ld be impossible for Western powers to work with both at once." Whatever ha ppens, we will have to accept that anti-Western sentiment (whether in its militan t Islamic form or not) wiII continue to grow for some time to come. There are, arguably, only two ways to diffuse it. One is to try to resolve the Palestine question in favour of Islam - a prospect which the general increase in Western sympathy for Israel makes increasingly unlikely. The other is to appease Third World sentiment by rethinking Western attitudes to the global economic order. Judging by the failure of Western powers to reach agreement even on the subject of their own agricultural subsidies at last December's GATT talks, this may not prove any easier. The invasion of Kuwait caught the West in a mood of complacent, self-congratulatory triumph following the apparent victory in the Cold War. Enthusiastic talk of a new world order initially provided President Bush with the moral authority neccessary to weld together a coalition against Saddam Hussein. However, this enthusiasm for a much-vaunted new era in international relations was largely a North American and European phenomenon, based on the assumption that Western culture had won the ideological war with its competitors and that all that remained to be done was the global application of its principles. The hollow nature of such self-righteousness is axiomatic among the Muslims of the Middle East. Even leaving aside the West's earlier support of Iraq during the war with Iran, Western criticism of Iraqi aggression and Saddam Hussein's growing military arsenal sits unfavourably with the relative silence on the continuing occupation of Palestine and Israel's development of nuclear weapons. The longer Western troops are required to stay in Saudi Arabia, the more widespread Middle Eastern misgivings abou t Western hypocrisy will become . • One consequence of eventual allied victory in the current conflict may be to give added impetus to the process of democratization, especially following critilcism of the ossified political systems we are supposedly fighting to defend feeling. Even in the occupied territories ot the West Bank, frustration at continuing deadlock is enabling the Islamic group Hamas to challenge the PLO's hitherto unassailable position as the sole legitimate voice of Palestinian Arabs. This process is by no means confined to the Middle East. A hitherto dormant section of world Islam, now emerging gingerly from the communist vastness of the Balkans and Soviet Central Asia, is slowly re-establishing an identity denied by decades of state-sponsored atheism. In the Muslim republics of the Soviet Union, democratization has been fitful, and the emergence of specifically Islamic political movements has been hampered somewhat by ethnic rivalries. However, Marie Broxup of the London-based Society for Central Asian Studies believes that both the decaying communist authorities and upcoming opposition groups are embracing Islam in order to capture public trust. "The population is profoundly Islamic," she says, "and everything has to be dressed up in Islamic slogans in order to be popular." It's instructive to note that the liberal model which the West would no doubt prefer to see emerging from these democratizing societies often has few supporters among the people who actually live there. Although it is still premature to speak of whole tracts of the Muslim world "going fundamentalist", the forces which oppose radical Islam can only divert support away from the fundamentalists by outdoing them in anti-Western rhetoric. Dr Rosemary Hollis, an expert on Middle Eastern international relations at the Royal United Services Institute, thinks that the prestige currently enjoyed by the Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan, for example, can be partly explained by the B L I T Z 49 GALLERY An irregular series in which we commission celebrated artists to create one-off works for BLITZ Curated by Andrew Renton and Henry Bond Lawrence Weiner There can hardly be a more important or prolific figure in the history of Conceptual Art than American-born Lawrence Weiner. Now aged 50, his current exhibition, 'Spheres of Influence' (at London's ICA until March 3rd), confirms the consistency of his work and the continuing significance of h is statement in 1967 that : 1. The artist may construct the piece. 2. The piece may be fabricated. 3. The piece need not be built. Each being equal and consistent with the intent of the artist the decision as to condition rests with the receiver upon the occasion of receivership. What was so radical about the implications of this statement was that the work of art no longer needed to be object-orientated, and could indeed exist in the realms of language. Furthermore, it was the experience of the work, the "occasion of receivership" which determined the life and meaning of the piece. Weiner's works in the gallery consist of arrange ments of words and terse phrases applied directly to the wall. Imaginary landscapes and irreconcilable oppositions are suggested in equal mea sure. Weiner never actually mounts the work himself, but provides the gallery with typed (and signed) statements of the words he wants included, followed by full instructions as to how they should be displayed. His layouts are then applied to the walls by professional sign-writers in the precise colours and spatial distributions that he specifies. Weiner's work is not confined to the gallery. He has produced a large number of books, has set his words to country & western music (as Ned Sublet and the Persuasions) and has even made a piece on top of a building in Monte Carlo - not for the wealthy inhabitants of the principality, but for any UFO which might happen to pass by. We iner's is an art which does not impose upon its receiver, but offers the possibility of countless reconstructions by anyone and everyone who comes across it. • 50 B LI T Z ..:. The sartorial splendour of Vic Reeves, Britain’s Top Light Entertainer and Singer A Day In The Life Of An English Gent Interview Andy Darling Photographs Richard Varnden Vic Reeves ... \.. -.' a • ; j .. . ~ ~. I . .. film One of the biggest challenges for a film reviewer is to judge a film fairly after having seen it in its unnatural habitat: the press screening room. The Great British Film Reviewer is by nature a cautious, reserved creature who seems to economize on oral response; God forbid he or she should laugh too 10udlY,Jump too noticeably, gasp too audibly, or - horror of horrors - clap at the end. Audience participation is at a distinct minimul11. These reviewers are, after all, profes Bonnie Vaughan sionals doing their job, not out to have fun, impress their dates, escape into a fantasy world. This, by Jove, is IPork. on the joys and Alarmingly, such repression is infectious, and can there horrors of audience for(' become a kind of predetermined code. In many ways participation it's tantamount to the difference between watching a film on video at home - alone or in company, surrounded by household distractions - and going out and getting the full impact that a big, full-house theatre viewing guaran tees. Of course, the opposite extreme can be Just as IN HRI . . . devastating: to be surrounded by people who bring their AWAKENINGS at-home video viewing behaviour to the theatre with them Director Penny Marshall proves she's better aU - talking and asking questions loudly throughout; carry In light comedy With th iS sentimental , desper ing on like it's feeding time at the zoo - is my idea of ately earnes-t rendering of Oliver Sacks' book about the treatment of the Victims of Parkin movie hell. $On's disease. Robin Vv'illi ams as celebrated Nevertheless, I WJS very excited to be in the very neuro logist Dr Malcolm Sayer IS merely re strained. while Robert De Niro as h iS key excitable queue at San Francisco's Regency Theater to see patient Leonard seems to be making up for Francis Coppola's THE GODFATHER III bst Boxing Day. hav ing turned down the lead role In Big. BY This, I decided, was one movie that "ad to be seen with a big audience, right at the beginning of its release, when DESPERATE HOURS M ickey Rourke, sport ing a scary new set of expectations were at fever pitch. I was prepared to be ultra-white choppers, plays an escaped killer assaulted by overheard remarks ("Well, the Examiner I.vho holds a middle-class fami ly hostage In called it 'a noble effort. .. "'; .. I heard it's not as good as the th iS uneven thr il ler, directed by Michael CiminO and co-starr ing Anthony Hopk ins, first two ... ") as we settled into our scars; I braced myself M imi Rogers and Kell y Lynch. Rour ke can be for the palpable ripple ofcnthusiasm that would greet the given full credit for making the whole th ing familiar theme tunc and logo. What I wasn't prepared for, laughable.lI\ however, was the rredominant reaction among the mel11 GREEN CARD Delightful, del iCiO USromantiC comedy by Peter Weir In which Gerard Depard leu (In hiS Eng li sh-speaking debut) and And ie Mac Dowell marry for convenience and then fall In luurve Yes, It'S as corny as it sounds, but it's also completely InfectiOUs, not least due to Depardieu's IrreSistible magnet ism , and Mac Dowell's absolute grace.flV I HIRED A CONTRACT KILLER Fmr,lsh director Ak l Kaurlsmak l's latest offer Ing stars Jean-Pierre Leaud as a fa ded SU ICi de ."..,Iho. as a last resort, hires a profeSSional hit man (Ken Colley) to do the Job. He changes his mmd, howeyer, after meeting and fa lling In love With Margl (lark, and the two find themselves on t he run. A dark, Immensely touching and qUIrky tribute to the B-movle.SF MEET THE APPLEGATES Heathers director M ichael Lehmann aga in lampoons M iddle America With this hilarious laughfest. A fam ily of giant South American cockroachcs metamorphose Into In Jverage subu rban family In order to Infiltrate and save the ramforest, but end up comp letely cor rupted by their new lifestyle. Ed Begley Jr, Stockard (hannlng and Dabney Coleman head an excellent cast.8V TATIE DANIELLE When bloody-m inded, Isolated (and consider '!. ab ly wea lthy) old Auntie Dan leHe IS persuaded ~ to s.ell up her proVinC ial home, hand over the ~ money and live With her nephew and his -; bourgeOIs famil,' in Pans, all hell breaks loose. ~ Her antics Include urinating on a chair during a ~ dinner party, persecuting the dog and flnai!y 1.1; burning the house down. An offbeat, unnerv ~ mg , wonderfully observed black comedy.SF . c ~ Q&A : Racism and ethnIC loyalty among the police ~ force, and in socJety at large, is at the core of -~ th iS Sidney Lumet-directed thriller. FBI man 0: Timot hy Hutton threatens to expose bent cop l' Nick Nolte's gratuitous murder of a local His ~ panic hood, With the help of fantastICally slimy ~ kingpin Armand Assante, Gritty, violent and strangely uncomfortable '1lewlng.BV w 60 B LIT Z AI Paclno as Don Michael Corleone In The Godfather III: "now 60, haggard, hunched and haunted" bers of this particular packed house. Laughter. Every move made by Al Pacino as Don Corleone now 60, haggard, hunched and haunted, bristly silver hair standing on end like he's permanently connected to a live socket - was greeted by chuckles. Every time 1alia Shire as his domineering sister - now helJbent on vicarious power and revenge - opened her mouth to deliver a linc, guffaws. When Andy Garcia, as Sonny Corleonc's vol atile, ambitious bastard son Vinnie, adjusts his balls in his opening scene, they clutched their sides. When Vinnie blows a would-be assassin's head off. the whole house came down. This was bizarre. And, needless to say, it tainted my whole perception of the long-awaited final chapter in the Codfather trilogy. Punctuated by such open mirth, the entire film played as parody. It is fair to say, however, that compared with the two previous films, Cod/;1ther I I I runs more like a soap opera. Less In allegory of violent, crime ridden, capitalist America, II ['S leitmotif is Corkone's desire to ,ltone for his sins, proclaiming, "The only wealth in the world is children." He wants to make amends with his ex-wife Kay (Diane Keaton); he wants what's best for his children Anthony (Franc D'Ambrosio) and Mary (Sofia Coppola), even if it's not what they want for themselves; he wants out of the racket once 'lnd for all. But sinister subplots - one largely confusing and impenetr able scenario which involves laundering money through the Vatican, another in which smalltime hood Joey Zasa (played by the excellent Joe Mantegna) trics to muscle in on the organization - ensure that Corleonc has no choice; he's drawn back in with greater force that ever before, and as loyalties shift faster than machine-gun fire, his life is constantly on the line. The GodFather I I I is full of echoes of thc earlier films, and boasts the stunning visual quality and outstanding camerawork so marked in parts I and II. There is, however, a more urgent sense of deja 1!1I. The corpse-for-a-corpse body count fails to shock as it did 1Il the original, because we've seen a hundred viciQus, bloody mafia lIlovies since then. The chilling scene in Parr I in which Michael is hailed as the new Don is mirrored in Part II I when Michael bestows the title on Vinnie, but comes off like a faded carbon copy. And Corleone himselfis but a shadow of his former, menacing self - it's difficult to recall how or why this seemingly shell-shocked man struck so much awe and terror into the lives of both his loved ones and his enemies. But of course , it was difficult to recall illl)'thillg while surrounded by a bunch oflaughing hyenas. It's impossible to say whether this audience's reaction was an isolated incident, or whether every showing at this theatre had the same result. I heard that they laughed at aNew York press screening too. I also heard that during both the London multi-media screening and the Christmas Day showing at a theatre in Fort Worth, Texas, the audience sat clenched in a reverential hush throughout. Who knows what it all means' Maybe it was Just the time of year, or the way the planets were aligned that day. Or the fact that nowadays, everybody thinks they're a damn film critic. With her painfully evident lack of acting experience, Coppola's daughter Sofia - her face more crooked than Liza Minnelli's, her vowels distinctly California Valley, her every move screaming awkward self-consciousness - did much to keep the laughter quotient high at the San Francisco Regency Theater. There's one integral scene focusing on her character - in which she memorably cries, .. Da-a-a-d'" - that, instead of inspiring the tears it was so obviously intended to, moved the San Francisco audience to cheer instead. By this time, I gave up the resistance andjoined right in with them. And by Jove, how fantastically liberating it was. Look out, Wardour Street. • ads This is something you'll want to refer to again and again, No, not this; this you'll throwaway like the callous consumers you arc. "This" is some fishing part work, and the immortal lines are spoken by Tom PlCkering. Mr Pickering isjust a fa mOllS angler - or at least a fish expert of some sort. However, the way he says the line ("This ... " - pause - "... is something you'll want to refer to again and again") should soon turn him into a cult figure. Tom has livened up the part-work season. It always Mark Edwards comes along early in the year (after Christmas TV airtime keeps it simple gets very cheap), and there's always a health one, an historical one, a wildlife one and a sort of vaguely scientitic one. Buy Number 1, get Number 2 free, send off for our free binder. But the whole publishing industry knows that the sales curve of these things looks , well, dangly and sorrowful instead of upward and thrusting. It is also the time of New Year's resolutions, and punters will cheerfully buy one, two, maybe even three of the fifty-two week series ... and then stop, which kind of brings a nice irony to Tom's single line. "This ... " - and now we understand the full weight of that pause - "... is something you'll want to refer to again and again." H e is, after all, holding Issue I, and since you aren't going to buy any others, what else are you going to look at again and again' Answer: that silly woman dreaming her dreams, saving for some of them. and, you know. just plain achieving Terence Higgins Trust: "Much more like the European AIDs-related work" others. YOll know how it is when some dreams just kinda get achieved. It 's like when ... like when your daughter has the freedom to be. Whaddya mean, "Be what?" Not be anything; just be. Sheesh . What is it with you? Why do you have to be so ... so undreamy' Why don't you just let yourself go' Just travel with her.:. all the way to Ahfricail. And you know how you're getting there? In a plane that's going to crash two seconds after the camera's stopped rolling. That's how. But why can't you just enjoy it' Why can't you just be' Because this is vcry, very lazy advertising, that's why. I mean, there 's bad advertising; that we all recognize. And we all see how it got that way. We can see there was a good idea in there, and we can see sort of where it got lost. But then there's advertising where there just isn't an idea at all. Where the only idea they actually had was to do an ad. Full stop. Sometimes, the creators are embarrassed by the fact that there isn't an idea there, so they run it by you real cheap and fast , and you go, " What ,vas that all about'" Alternatively, they think , "OK, so we haven 't got an idea. Well, if we make it big enough, they might not notice that it doesn't exist." And then they run it by you real big, and you go, "What the fuck was that all about?" And the person next to you on the sofa goes, "Was that a Jewish 62 B LIT Z wedding? Why was that aJcwish wedding;" And you go, "Alzfricah?" And they go, "Freedom to be" with lots of doomy emphasis, and then you both giggle. And it's all a horrible mistake, but at least it's got scale, it's got ambi tion , it's got six different types of monochrome. And it is so lazy they should be deeply ashamed of the whole thing. Yes, even after they win all sorts of awards for the creative work. Because they 're paid too much to work on autopilot like this. It's all the more surprising coming from the NATION WIDE, which produces painstakingly written , nicely turned, well argued press ads - things with content. But the TV commercial that doesn't say anything is just the laziest thing there is. And where some ads are bad, when they don't even try, when all the thought that should have gone into producing advertising goes into finding loca tions, and getting the lighting right , and making unusual casting choices , and turning the words around to make them sound deep, when in fact they sound more like Doctor Who alienspeak - "Dazzling things dazzle me still.., simple dreams I dream ... I became us ... escape is impossible . ., exterminate ... exterminate" - it's simply inexcusable. After that little bit ofirritation, how nice to turn quickly to a willy dancing through a garden. If you haven't seen the new cinema commercial for the TERENCE HIGGINS T'RUST, you won't know what I'm talking about (or, if you haven't seen it and you do know what I'm talking about, that's your own very private concern, and we won 't pry). In the ad an ani mated willy approaches what I suppose we can't avoid referring to as the por tals oflove (you know, the bit Prince always used to write about), only to be refused entry. Later, he returns wearing a condom, and, well. bit of a result. Fire works ... literally. It's much more like the European AfDS-related work that's been around for a whi re than any of the po faced UK stuff. (I don't mean it's a rip-off; I mean in attitude.) And it 's a welcome change. My only quibble is that I wish they'd used better music, but only because I like to think of people walking into Our Price and asking if they 've got a copy of that cock musIC. The animation is a simple idea - and it's hard to get down to sim pie. To refer back to Prince for a second, what the good advertising idea is, is a groove; it's not actually that hard to get one going, it's just that then everyone comes along and adds too much stuff and kills it. A good groove is one idea, and every instrument has the same idea, and mere mortals get to it by doing everything and then editing back down. The art in advertising is to know when to throw all (hat great stuff out, because even if it is great, it isn't helping the groove. Alarmingly, my whole philosophy, sorry, thang about ads is virtually summed up in - of all things - a beer ad. The latest in a series of fine ads for BECK'S is headlined: "In a dazzling flight of imagination (and at no little expense), the agency unveil their new slogan." Above it is an archive photo from Ghana in 1958, showing a banner which reads: BECK'S BEER... fT'S THE BEST. They may think they're taking the piss with that headline. But just maybe they're clever enough to know they're not; to know just what a dazzling flight of imagination that is. • Who Drinks Molson Special Dry? A BLITZ PROMOTION The new premium lager with a special taste art In case you haven't heard, there's a recession on. No one quite knows despite what th e economists would have us believe whence. why and how recessions come upon us so suddenly. But there are reasons nonetheless . And this time - you heard it here - it's official , and it will not be short lived. Art world ha cks like myself have been predicting it for a couple of years. but following the decline in the stock market and the property market, the figures are now beg inning to show for real. Auction house takings are Andrew Renton on down by as Illuch as 5U percent, and there are stories 'the R word' waftin g from Cork Street along Bond Street, to 'New C ork Street' (aka D ering Street), that SOllle gall eries aren't selling any pieces from one month to the next. Things have alrcad y reached such a sorry pass that the word 'recession' has become as unmentionable in the art world IN SRI . . . as 'Macbeth' in the theatre. People barely whisper, mum bling 'the R word' und er their breath. FASHION PHOTOGRAPHY SINCE 1945 So what arc the implications of such an economic crisis Victoria and Albert Museum, London on the way art is mad e; Surely the artist doesn't need to SW7 (Feb 13th to April 28th) ThiS IS, surpri Singly, the Tlrst exhibiti on to show think about recession; The studio is a sacred place. Well, fa shion photography pu rely for Its creat ive first , it is not just :1 question of Il1aking the art. but also of value, rather than as a ma rket ing tool for receivin g it. The art mu st be se en. to have an effect. deSigners. The show spans the last for ty-five yearsan d includes the work of Man Ray, Irving Seco nd, after a decade o f excess . wh ere the art ended up for some stick for the way that he has disposed of parts of his collection. E ven Juli an Schnabel, o ne of those who benefited most from the Saatchi boom, was heard to mumble something recently about.maiL ord er cata lo gues ane! selling. All thi s is old news. What I do think has been underesti mated about Saatchi is that he und erstood the ph ysicality of art. H e believed in the seduction and the reality of the object. (No m ean achievement for a man who built a biLl ion-dollar busines s based on ideas, not ass ets.) Ac cordingly, the latest installation at 98a Doundar y Road still impress es , whatever recessive tendencies arc being fclt beyond its luminescent walls. First of all, if Saatchi is selling, thcn his inVt'ntory of remaining works must still be quite amazing. Witness the dozcn s of CINDY SHER· MAN photo graphs which line the walls (see BLITZ <)7). From the pathbrcaking U/llillcd FilII/ Slil/s , begun when sh e was still a student , to the recent reiterations of classical painting - a tru e representation of one of th e maj o r new figures of American art on display. This was always thc Saatchi way. The collection, whenever it chose to focu s, wa s comprehensive and highly reprcs entative o f the best of that particular field of activity. Penn, Helmut Newton, Rob ert M applethorpe and Bruce Weber. 20:50 by RlchQrcfWllson: "mosllmpresslve of QU" THE ANTI PORTRAIT Na tional Museum of Photography, Film and Television, Bradford BD5 Or R (Jan 29th to April 30th) If you though t portraits were meant always to be flattering, think again. The 'Anti Portrait" sets out to show that hars h light ing, unconvent ion al angles, can did and even surr ea l po r t ra it ure ca n succe ssfu ll y comm unICate aspects of a si tter' s personali ty. Includes many works from the pages of BLI TZ POP PRINTS Tate Gallery, London SWI (March 6th to June nrd) Feat Uring over 100 Bri tish and Ame rican Pop prin ts dating fro m 1959 and the beginnings of the Pop Art movement to th e ea rl y Eigh ties; the exhibition Incl udes the wo rk of Dine, War hol. Oldenburg, Hamil to n, Hcckn ey and Paolozzl. MAX ERNST Tate Gallery, London SWI (Feb 13th to April 21st) Major retrospec tive to celebrate the centena ry of one of the foremost Surrealist artis ts; the man w hom Andre Bret on descr ibed as poss essing "the most mag nifICently haunted bra in" Over 200 pa intings, drawi ngs, coll ag es and scu lptures. CARL ANDRE, ELLSWORTH KELLY, RICHARD LONG An thony d'Of/ay Gallery, London WI (March 1st to April 13th) fo CUSin g on three artists using the medium s of bronze, steel, sto ne an d wood. The new sh ow wil l Inclu de two works each from min imalist sculptor Ca rl And re an d painter Ell sworth Kelly, plu s a new Belgi um stone scul pture by Ri cha rd Long. SUS AN:\AH FRA:\KEL 64 B L I T Z being about that excess. ane! about the idea of art as a self validating commodity, such manipulations would appear a little indelicate in the gallery today. As belts tighten , let me predict th e rise of that old gallery stalwart, the group show. There will be fewer and fewer risks taken on on e-person shows, unless they are absolute dead CLTts. And wc thought it was all so stable. But one should pay attention to the small print at thc bottom right-hand corner of the canvas, just below the signature and date : "Remember, the value of investments can go down as well as up. " Part of th e problem lies in overproduction. In the early Eighties, demand was fed by a COnstant supply. (Has anyone ever thought that perhaps the dominant stylistic mode of the time, a 50-called Nco-Expres sionism, was actually dictated by th e nee d to make a lot of art very quickly' No, I don't really believe it either, but som ewhere therein lies a grain of truth.) And where are they now, those g raffiti artists, and splash-it-all-over types ; They used to lie in bank vaults, w aitin g for the inevitabl e rise in value. C ert ainly, the occasional error woul d be made, but that wa s J calculated risk. And now? They have moved from the bank vault in Manhattan to a landfill site in New Jersey. I f there was one collector who epitomized th e growth of collecting in the Eighties, it was C harles Saatchi, who with his wife , and in parallel to the staggering growth of hi s advertising agency - more or less invented a new marketplace. (The parallel in their respective declines is no accident either.) In the past couple of years, he has come in RICHARD ARTSCHWAGER's sculpture from the Six ties seemed to comc into its own durin g th e Eig hti es when we all talked simulationism over b rcakbst. (Incid ent ally, who believes Baudrillard these cla ys; ) It looks immaculate here, but is fa st losing curren cy. My favourit e Arts ch wager piece, a more recent confess io nal stand, SL'ts the tone for the rcst of the Ninctics, \\'ith its natura l wood set against that sleek predominan cc o f Fo rmica. Yet mo st impressive of all in this !lew installation must be RICHARD WILSON's 20: 5(). I\-e seen it twice befiJre, and each time it had to be completely remade according to the dim ension s of the exhibition space. The new version is the mo st stunning of them all. A sin g le steel pathway leads the viewer into a va st still lake of black sump o il, which rises some four feet above the ground and is entirely contoured to the planes of the gall ery. The darkl y reflective surface of the oil (it looks 50 solid) emphasizes the cool geometry of the architecture, and provides J metaphorical reflection of the gallery, and on the function of the collection its elf We shall see .. All is not doom and gloom in the world, and thC' re is no doubt that malers and purveyors of art can and will change to accommodate and und erstand the tim es . Per haps there is some good to be gleaned from the wreckage - a new infusion of the spiritual in art , perhaps; More pessimistically, the dictum by which the art world has perpetuated its elffor almost a decad e has been: "Whcn the going gets tough , the tough go shopping." And now, I suppose it 's more like: "When the going gets tough, the tough go into receivership." • • print "The authors who live in legend," Mailer once wrote, "offer personalities criminall y neg lec ted Chicago-bo rn writer, a hi g hl y we can comprehend like movie stars. Hemin g way and sy mpathetic study of an acutely sens itive populist artist Fitzgerald impinge on our psyche with the clarity of who styled him self as the poor man's Dostoyevsk y. Bogart o r Cag ney. We co mprehend them at once ... By his late teens AJgren bega~ ex ploring the poo r [Henry] Miller, however, exists in the sa me relation to neig hbollrhoods of his native Chicago, drifting towards legend th at anti-matter shows to m atter. His life is the Communist move ment. At the start of the Great antipathetic to the idea of lcgc nd itself.. hi s personality is Depression he sta rted hitchhiking through the American never clear, It is too com plex and too vigorous, therefore Midwest, loo king for work as a newspaperm an. He Jon Wilde looks at too worri so me for us, to o out of measure," became a drifter,jo ining the ten s ofthousands ofAm erican The sa m e might be said of those other two g rea t literary transients wandering the country in search of work, three American heroes re co rding his ex per iences in a back -pocket notebook. In outlaws, Nelson Algrcn and William Burro ughs. It is as if their reputations li ve in a vo id , fluctuatin g m ad ly. Literary 1935, aged 30, he delivered hi s debut novel, SOll1ebody ill histor y has marginalized th em, Mill e r, th e merr y Boots, but it would be another twelve years, num e ro us porno g ra pher, author of one of the century's most breakdowns and a failed marriage before he delivered his IN BRI . . . notorio us novels in Ji'opi c ql Cancer; Algren , the lover of first masterpiece, !'\'eIJCI' Come IHomillg, followed two years Simone de Beauvoir, author of The Milll With th e Golden later by The .'1<111 Wich che Golden Arm. NORMAN MAILER The Fight (Penguin, (599) Ann, turned into a neutered , sen timentalized film vehicle But alread y he was on a down wa rd slope. His love affair The self-styled champ of American letters for Sinatra; Burroughs, the man who kill ed his wife with a with de Beauvoir broke down , descending into bitter exercises hiS colossal ego and JOCKstrap envy bullet thro ugh the head and wrote The Naked LUllch. public feuding, Royally shafted by agents, lawyers and yes as he joms the Ali-Foreman circ us in Zaire, an event charged li ke a fu rious electriC Clfcu it Rob e rt Fe r g uson's HENRY MILLER: A LIFE men, he gave away the film ri g hts to Goldfll Arm for a Our Norrn soaks up the tensIon durmg the (Hutchinson, £18.99) is a ri veting study of the man who pittance. By the mid-Fifties, he was ge nerally rega rded as a weeks of prep arati on, unsuccessfully at m an whos e time had come and gone. Algren su bsequently once des cribed himself as "con fused, neglige nt , reckless, tempts to dodge Ali's appalling poetry. and flays his nerves up to the moment when lost himself in gambling, drinking and uncommitted lust y, obscene, boisterous, th oug htful, scrupulous, lying, foreman plops like a falling lamppost. f ire diabolica ll y truthful ". Growing up as a streetwise city boy affairs. Financiall y insecure and low in self-es tee m _ he works of virtuosity_ in the Brook lyn ghetto, Miller displayed a contempt for withdrew and began to feed off him sel C rakin g throug h JOHN HIND The Comic Inquisition (Virgin, conventio n and responsibilit y fro m a tend er age. At six, he his memo ries for m aterial to recycle. He turned from (699) was dragged off to the local police fiction to j ou rnalism and sold largely The est imable madcap Hind pokes around in co medy's in testin es for the meaning of laugh station by an older girl who had inferior work to glossy American ter and emergeshold!ng hISsides. To ce:ebrate caught him usi ng foul language ma gazines. B y the time of his dea th in the art of the chuck le-maker. he hauls the likes •I (" Fuck off shorty! ") in the street. In 198 1. the g rea t poe t of the Ch icago of Cfeese, Dodd. Cook. Manning. f ry and Sadowltz onto the shrink 's couch ana asks his late tee ns, he entered an intense slums hadju st about been written out ' tons of Impertinent questions. The slickest, love affai r with a woman o ld eno ugh of litera ry hi story. sneakiest. slaphapplest book ever written . to be hi s mother. Later, a miserable Ted M orga n 's LITERARY OUT· about comedy, for sure , I first marriage. In 1923, aged 32, he LAW: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF JOHN WATERS Shock Value (4th Eslate, • ~• . J finally met hi s narcis sisti c equal in WILLIAM S BURROUGHS (Jona than £9.99) r _ • Ca pe, \:15.99) is a consummate stud y From the openmg line ("If someone vomits Jun e Edith Smith. \t,Jatching one of my films It'S like getting a Miller em e rges as a tang le of ofa true rc'negade, not so much a man standing ovation") to the las t, th is IS a gloriouS co ntradict io ns. On th e o ne hand , as an accumulatio n of irregu la rities. odyssey through the depraved imagination of On the surface, reserved , co nser the half-man/half-wastebin who has fash supreme ego ist, sexu al athlete, l~ mH'.-.~F ~ . E AND TIMES OF Ioned himself as th e Apost le of Bad Taste sponger, sens ual l'rophet and bone vatin', in scr utable, eve n se r e n e. More fun than all his dreary movies together. idle bohemian . On the other, J hard Equally, one who po ssessed "an These unexpurgated memoirs make de Sa de's headed and ca lculating figure with a insatiable appetite for the extreme and Justine read like the dlanes of Mother Teresa . I UGH S puritan streak who suffered from the sensational, for the morbid , slim y JOYCE CAROL OATES Because It 15 Bi tter. piles thro ugho ut his ea rly manhood. and unwho leso me". Burrou g hs' life and Because It 15 My Heart (Macmillan, £13.99) At the beginning of the Thirties, has often see m ed wilder and more TEDMOflGAN Set in upstate New Yor k In the Fifties. the middle-a ge d, penniless an d des implausible than his own inventi o ns. atmosphere pu trid Wi th raCial te nsion, Oates's perate, he left New York for Europe. By the early Forties, he would titully latest tragedy offers tantalrzlng possi bili ties as the fates of a young white girl and a young succeed in distancing himself from his educated Midwest In the bu g-ridden hotel rooms , seedy bars and cheap black boy converge when they are tmp!lcated brothels of Paris, he met amor phosed from Miller the background and hooking up with fellow misfits, Kero uac in a violent street murder. Promismg a dose of charming nobody into Miller the literary gen ius, who and Ginsberg, in New York. Over the next fifty years he vintage Oates, the ta le inexplicably wanders into a coyly sentimental dead -end, A crushmg would write the "fuck yo u" book that would "detonate in would model himself variously as junky saint, jailbird, anticlimax after 1989's thrilling American Ap the gut of America like a fi ery, bacterial bombshell". With Beat angel, psychic explorer, roaming exile and multi petites (now avai lable in Picad or paperback) Ji'opic ol Callcer, he reinvented the literature of self media artist. Aged 40, still supported by his parents, he had RUSSELL LUCAS Evenings At Mang ini's confession , opening with the warning, "This is not a publishedjust o ne obscure novel,JIHIk y. After shoo ting his IMinerva, £4.99) book , in the o rdinar y sense of the word .,. This is a wife he settled in "(ang ier, naturally fa lling in with the local Set in India tn the For ties and Fifties and highly prolonged insult, a gob of spit in the face of Art, a kick in low lifes, and wrote The Na ked LII/nil wh ile in th e charged like the stifl ing summer air before a storm, these ten stories tell of adu ltery, sexual the pants to God, Mall , Destiny, Time, Love , Beauty, agonizing th roes o f heroin withdrawal. The no vel obse.sslon, thwarted paSSions, soured asplra · what you w ill. " For the 1.1St three-ancl-a-half decades of his launched him to no toriety, ifn ot famt'. For mLlch o f the last t.l0ns and real -l ife farces. Lucas has booked a life, Miller retired to California and, although he made a thirty years , it might be arg ued that Burroug hs has place alongSide Cheever, Carver and Dubus as a master of the modern short story. Unput comfo rtable li vin g, he was m arginalized as a writer, wilfully squandered mLlch of his talent on dubious downable. content to play the part ofg uru of the new radi calism. His experiments (cut-ups and fold-in s) and mu ch ofhis energy best work was still unpubli shable and hi s later fiction on assorted ll1umb o jumbo (o rgone boxes, brain-wave MICHAEL IGNATIEFF Asya (Chatto & Wind us, £13.99) wrestled with the problem of how to re-createJune Smith! ge nerators, dream machines , Scientology). However, The omnipresent Ignatieff makes his fictional returning to N ew York in the Seventies, he began to Mill er o n the page. Well into hi s eighties, he still possessed debut with a dynas ti c epic which alms to produce his best work for decades. an insatiable appetite for life. assimllate the malar historical events of the cen tury. De.spite fleet ing moments of en Where Miller sought out the immoral , the wicked, the Al g ren, Burro ug hs and Mill e r were writers who dared chantment. this slender romance refuses to ugl y, the un spea kable ane! turned it into a metaphor for to li ve at the dee pest level of honesty they could endure. support the weight of Ignatleff's pompous himsel f and his times, N elson Al gren spent hi s life among T hey pushed o ur noses in the dirt oftheir experiences and it ambition. Ultimately, the kind of spunk Ie" prose that would send a Booker judge into th e poo r, the dispossessed and the hopeless, the criminal was easier to turn away. Ifwhat is good in their w riting is so paroxysms of fake delight.JO:'i ,'n LDJ:: and the ex plo ited, and responded with co mpassion and close to what is bad, then that is because, working Ollt of a anger. Bettina Drew's NELSON ALGREN: A LIFE ON THE fatal need, they dared to fail. Three Americ~l1 heroes, ripe WILD SIDE (Bloo msbury, £20) is the first biograph y of th e for rea ppraisal. • .. ~ ~ r ~I ~ , ~ l" ; W~L.LIAM S. ' B.u)~~~O 66 B L I TZ television The pre-Chdstmas BBC screening of Ferris Budler's Day qffreminded me ofJohn Hughes' consistency in booby-trapping his films with Moments of Weakness. The avarice, callousness and gag flow grind to a halt to be replaced by a life lesson , Bueller's being the jarring and interminable sequence in which Ferris's constipated friend achieves self-respect through demolishing his dad's Ferrari. The current series BEVERLY HILLS 80210 centres around the offspring of a Minneapolis white-collar nu Jonathan clear family transplanted to the warmth and weirdness of Bernstein's the West Coast. Enrolled in the social war zone of West moments of Beverly Hills High, where the brats claim Beamers as weakness birthrights, they're confronted by a road-tested array of cardboard cut-outs: Platinum Amex princesses, dumb jocks with two-fisted IQs, short horny dorks , driven VIDEO loners and alienated outsiders. The series is an endless spin-cycle of tried and tested ROSELYNE ET LES LIONS (Palace) A much smaller film than one might have Hughes plotlines, but jettisoning the tribal codes and expected from French wonder boy director biological gross-outs in favour of moist Moments of Jean-Jacques Beineix after the success of Diva Weakness. Although constant allusions are made to the and Berty Blue. Here. his hero and heroine are a couple of feisty adolescents who leave home cruelty and vacuity of the rich kids, the new recruits' to pursue a career in the circus as lion tamers. integration seems relatively painless. Daughter Brenda is There is little of the passion or the danger immediately accepted into the inner sanctum of Kelly of Beinex 's former work, but the film compensates with considerable charm and an (Jennie Gorth), a vision of blonde superiority with a endearing lyricism deviated septum corrected into a nothing-nose. Son Brandon barely has time to unball his socks before he's THE GUARDIAN (ele) Woooen Jenny Seagrove is perfectly cast for sipping margaritas in the hot. once as a malevolent nature sprite - half tub with a neurotic nymph woman, half tree. Disguised as a nanny, she's who admires his indi on the hunt for babies to sacrifice In modern· day LA. Director William Friedkin used to viduality. make films like The ExorCISt and The French The show soft-pedals in Connection. Doubtless he now lies awake at school sadism. reserving its night wondering where he went wrong . A silly content for the lowest men but diverting chiller. on the totem. Parents. If HARDWARE (Palace) there's a reason to rejoice at Despite a minuscule budget. even by British the decline of the big screen standards, and a plot scavenged from a hundred other movies, this futuristic sCI·fi teenpic, it's that you no chiller has a distinctive style of its own. The longer have to endure the hardware of the title is a killer robot which degradation of some thir terrorizes scul ptress Stacey Travis in her own home. The film's strength IS its ambitious tyish actor humbled by ado Blade Runner meets Mad Max production lescent moral superiority. design; its greatest weakness, the generCtlly The adults on BH90210 take cheesy acting, Travis excepted. it on the chin every time. MUSIC BOX (Guild) They're decadent , they're Veteran political filmmaker Costa·Gavras turns his attentions to Nazi·hunting in dead, they 're rich and re contemporary America. Jessica lange turns in mote, they're poor and em a povverful performance as a lalNYer who barrassing, they don't care, chooses to defend her Hungarian-born father they care too much. Brend.1 when he is accused - wrongly. she believes of war crimes. A disturbing reminder that yol.; and Brandon's folk are par can never know people as well as you think ticularly abused , languishing you do. in the background, their di DAYS OF THUNDER (Cle) alogue limited to "Where arc Proof perfect of all that's wrong With you going''', "What time will you be back?", "·1 was Hollywood these days. Tom Cruise's most wrong " and "I love you". recent excursion - in wh ich he plays a California brat who. against all the odds. Produced by Propaganda Films (who make IiV;Il Peaks) becomes America's greatest stock car racer and featuring a Heather (Shannen Doherty) as leading looks like nothing more than a two·hour commercial. for Pepsi, perhaps, or Wrigley's lady, the series leads you to hope for teeth that are as sharp Spearmint Gum. Cliche piles upon cliche. and as they are perfect. It doesn't quite deliver, but I think there the resulting trifle has all the substance of a will be an audience satisfied with the show's slot. It's rare SQuff le. TOM ELIOT that the GB Public. who will convey instJnt benediction on anything bearing a Melbourne postmark, rally round an American import. When they do, it tends to be heavily youth-orientated (so we can exercise that disapproving how-unlike-our-own-drab-lives fascination). During the last decade, the TV version of Fame won the hearts and minds of stage-struck adolescent girls to the extent that, when the series sank back home, injections of UK funding refloated it for a fmal couple of seasons. The same is about to happen with Bayllla/ell. The sunshine, the selfishness - all thrilling from a distance, less so when it turns up on your doorstep. But that's not the only reason why the British adaptation of 68 BLITZ REMOTE CONTROL, the MTV couch-potato, it's-not a-gal1le-show game show, doesn't work. The blueprint programme was JUSt the best thing. The ranks of the contestants were made up of hog-calling frat house Blutos and chalk-pallored no-lifers convinced they were lost members of The Brady Bunch. Their importance to the show quickly dwindled as a loose-limbed aggregate of Jivey Jewish gag-writers pumped up schtick for host Ken Ober (a man so nebbishy that Madonna recoiled in horror when he tried to kiss her at an MTV awards show) and bemused Bronx bruiser Colin Quinn. When British youth act like goons, you think: students. Out in front, two of the best men in the country are at their worst. Anthony H WilsonJr, Ed D is a man with a big hear! and deep pockets, erudite, avuncular and emotional. Give him an autocue and he rules the noise. Give him an audience, contestants and co-presenters and he turns sour. He's too fast, too edgy. too nervous, his audible remarks seem to be in-jokes for the kinfolk. His right-hand man, Phil Corn well, in the guise of Gilbert the Mucus or in his awesome Steve Wright cameos, is the God of Funny. Naked to the world, however, his penis retracts . I hate it when that happens. Imagine how much worse it must feel in front of those students. The gags are lame, the audience is phoney and the presenters are traumatized. Kudos to go-ahead Granada for taking the initiative, and let me be the first to point them in the direction of Fangoria magazine's up coming splatter game show, Gore Zone. It's finally time to ring down the curtain on Terry Wogan. He's got no dignity left to lose, but let him crawl off and lick his wounds now that he's been terminated by the Tonigll/ Show. I'm not referring to TONIGHT WITH JONATHAN ROSS. The tab loids briefly tried to instigate a chat war but Jon's just as much a casualty as Terry in this instance, tripped up by the misapprehension that an early-evening talk show could have any claim on our custom. Ross is Teflon Man - nothing sticks, no highs and no lows. He' ll be alright. But Wogan? Time was he comp!.!ined about the BBC keeping him on the leash. He wanted a ftve-nights-a-week slot. Now the only thing he looks forward to is a decent showing at the wake. His colouring's bad, his posture's poor, the rug isn't nailed down tight 3nd his attention wanders. His nemesis - DES O'CONNOR TONIGHT. The great thing about Des is that he doesn't have a shred of talent and lie knows it! His astonishment and gratitude about having got away with it for so long are what's made him King of the Soft Interview. When a guest trots out a PR-honed interview, Wogan looks ready to keel over. Des hangs on every word, happy that he 's not on Income Support and in awe of anyone with any talent. He 's pleased to play feed to even the most calamitous club comic. Paramedics are on per manent alert in case Freddie Starr shows up. When Des dies, he'll go like Tommy Cooper - in front of the cameras and a cheery crowd. Russ Abbott will come on in costume: Des'll crease, he'll gasp, his eyes will pour, he'll slump down on the couch and expire with a smile on his face as the laughter fades away into the distance. When Wogan goes ... sorry, too late ...• • musIc In the Seventies, music journalists wanted to be in rock bands (Nick Kent and the Sex Pistols, Charles Shaar Murray inl3last Furnace & the Heatwaves). In the Eighties, management and entrepreneurialism were the order of the day (Paul Morley with the ZIT label, Dave McCullough with Blanco y Negro). And in the Nineties, they want to be drug dealers. My Christmas and New Year were peppered with worth less encounters with middle-class pop scriveners aged somewhere between their late twenties and late thirties, Andy Darling on who were evangelically convinced that they'd stumbled the music journalist as onto the greatest thing ever. They'd been hanging out Mr Big with the wide boys who comprise part of the audience and entourage of the likes of the Happy Mondays, The Charlatans, Flowered Up, EMF er at - all fine bands, I hasten to add. They "-new, through various labyrinthine IN BRI.~ connections - and again this has nothing to do directly with the bands - the top boys in the drug-dealing circles TONGUE MAN Joys of a Meatmaster of the capital city. Like doe-eyed puppies - like cretins (Drunken Swan) UncompromIsing stuff. Tongue Man give back actually, let 's not nance about - they stood near where the a bit of welcome grime to the gay experience, top boys might walk, hoping for a nod of acknowledg constructing literate, venomous rants with a ment , a flicker of recognition , anything. power that Mark E Smith wou ld give his eyeteeth for. Out way past Marc Almond (their The wide boy has, of course, always appealed to (a nd nearest signpost), they are the soundtrack Joe thus easily exploited) the middl e-class male who's never Orton would have always wanted and should quite had the guts to be Bad . The current wide boy there ever be a scratch 'n' sniff version, axle grease and semen will no doubt be much in portfolio of football, loud music, youth and drugs is a evidence. Gloriously dirty. surefire \vinner. Hence, the da\vn of the 11111sicjourno Mr THROWING MUSES The Real Ramona (4AD) One day Throwing Muses will make a bad record. Judging by this one, it will be some time in the middle of next century. Kristin Hersh's gentle hysteria neverfalls to move and Tanya Donelly's guitar slashes will no doubt earn her sainthood before long. 'Him Dan cing ' and 'Say Goodbye' are the best trac ks on an exemplary record . FLUKE The Techno Rose of Blighty (Creation) The smartest of Britain's dancefloor terrorists, Fluke make jittery, visceral techno, sampling everyth ing from Love UnlimIted to Jon i Mitchell. 'Joni', their bootleg dance smash from last year, utilizes the latter and rema ins the album's best cut, although 'Philly' and 'Glorious' run It close. KATHY MATTEA Untold Stories (Mercury) Perhaps 1991 will be the year that people finalty acknowledge country mlJsic to be more than mere novelty. Mattea is one of its finest exponents. possessing the grace of Nanci Griffith (whose 'Love at the Five and Dime' she tackles here with some aplomb) and the en during qualities that got her voted Female Vocalist of the Year by the Country Music Association. Sentimental, cliched and old fashioned she may be, but the genre's best usually is. Listen and weep. ULTRA NATE Blue Notes in the Basement (Eternal) Housey sou! that bolsters Nate's just above average vocal exercising to jikely commercial success. Recently the Blue PearVlnnocencel Definition of Sound path has been rather too regularly travelled, but jf there's space for one more, it's likely to be Ultra Nate. 'Love Hung over' and 'Is It Love' stand out and also demonstrate the record's lyrical obsession . There just ain't nO room for hate anymore, alas. . PA L MATH l1 R 70 B LIT Z Big is nigh. And so to THE FARM, a prime magnet. Liverpool, the working class, football, it 's ail here. SpartQclIs (Produce) is a good LP, although not quite JS signifIcant as last year's singles 'Groovy Train ' and 'All Together Now' augured. The structures ofthose songs were mightily impressive. Both took an age to build to their chorus hooks, but once the anthemic phrasing began it was as if, like various viral forms, they had existed for millennia, j list waiting for the correct conditions to lib erate them. One of the problems with the rest of Spartaws is Peter Hooton 's voice. The man cannot sing, which in pop terms generally doesn't mat ter a fig and is often a prere quisite. Unfortunately, he does it in the wrong key, thus straining r<lther unbecomingly for the top notes. His secular humanist lyrics arc somewhat slight when one considers the pedigree of the bnd's nunagell1ent (Suggs from Madness and Kevin Sam pson, a writer who penned a masterpiece on masturbation in the recen t issue of Boys' OWI1). And maybe the post-Funky Drummer beats are used too liberally, their CUlll bersollle geometry precluding any subtlety. Like David Essex, Billy Idol and Tom Jones, Boy George is an entertainer whom millions will watch eagedy on a TV chat show but few will follow the experience by purchasing his work, Tile Marly!" Mal/lras (Virgin) by George's current project JESUS LOVES YOU isn't bad by any means. Certainly his voice grates still, sounding like a 'black sou!' impersonation, much as the lead singer of UB40's amounts to an ersatz Jamaican reggae delivery. On 'Love's Gonna Let You Down', however, he 's right up there in the mi x, raw and grating. The mixes elsewhere, particularly by Paul Oakenfold, are admirably bassy and spacious. The piece de Iheatre is 'Bow Down Mister', the chorus of which runs "Bow down mister, Hare Rama Hare Krishna ". There's a Krishna Tem pIe singer sounding not unlike Ofra Haza, and an impressively 'Lord of the Dance' style acoustic guitar. But why isn't there a radical remix utilizing all the studiojiggery-pokery that we get on every other track? Is the acoustic instrument indeed, as legions of bearded, kagouled fools have claimed for decades, the most worthy for 'real expression'? The aim of the Hare Krishna movement is to become one with the atman, or the eternal spirit, and for this state to be reached the ego has to be defeated; is this tough, twenty-four hours a day quest best undt:rtaken with a catg ut and wood instru m ent; If this is the case, then how deeply is Boy George into the religion, given that only olle tra ck is presented in such a way? Religion and pop stars: what's going on exactly? Are Hazel O'Connor and Poly Styrene well' Freddie Mercury, I was once told, refused to do TV chat shows on account of his protruding teeth, and Brian May used to purchase an extra airline ticket so his guitar could have the seat next to him. Many folk would love for this to be the truth; anything that belittles QUEEN is meat to them. But never forget that Grandmaster Flash (on 'The Adventures of Grandmaster Flash & the Wheels of Steel'), Laibach ('One Vision') and, c'mon people, Vanilla Ice (on ' Ice Ice Baby') took them seriously enough to sample or cover their work. Iwwf/1do (Parlophone) is a cracker of an LP, the title track single distilling every sweeping, gran diose rock gesture Jim Steinman and Rush mustered up over the course of lifetimes' works. There are orchestral meandcrings, brooding strings, flamenco guitars, prog rock workouts , those marvellous phased harmonies, plaintive acoustic sections, the lot. Queen manage to be camp (their press officer refers to it a~ "OTT" ), and yet emotive at the same time. Think of'I Want To Break Free', the one with the video where Fred die donned pinnie and curlers. hllilierido continues the equation, particularly with the motorbike anthem 'Ride the Wild Wind', which conjures up a soundscape grander than The Cult or Billy Idol co uld manage. "Ride the wild wind!" booms Freddie, to which the boys in the band add "Don't sit on the fen ce!" Sometimes I almost like Queen as much as I like the Pet Shop Boys. Truth be told, as the year turned I suddenly seemed to be whisked back to some point between 1979 and 1981. First I met the guitarist from mod revival band THE CHORDS. He works in a south London garage and is getting J band together. Not a garage band , mind, he said ... Then, one night in a New Cross pub , a bunch of mohi canned fellows entered and partoo k of a swift snake bite before heading over the road to a hall where THE SUBHUMANS, prime 1980 punk rockers , were having a reunion gig. Then Brcakil1g Class was on TV, the movie with Hazel O'Connor copping off with Phil Daniels and shouting at The Man. Three occurrences weren't enough. A new TOYAH LP arrived in the morning post and, in keeping with the spirit of1980, I didn't listen to it. Finally, while walking down Oxford Street I heard a familiar voice emanating from one of the unofficial shops that have sprung up oflate, the ones where hawker types break into closed down premises and vend their wares, upsetting all the locals in the process. "Flannels! Flannels! Flannels at a pound!" shouted the man. It was Duffo, the Australian pop singer who never quite made it in the New Romantic flush. "It's better than them selling drugs, any road " commented an old lady passing . • In France, even rap artists are sponsored by the state. Julie Street explains how French rappers are struggling to preserve their own voice an you imagine Geoffrey Howe getting on down at a rap concert, or john Peel as a right on right honourable MP? If they were French you could. This side of the channel they do things their way and the links between rap, politics and rock 'n' roll are very strange indeed. Take for example the government-sponsored concert at the Elysees Montmartre. It was an atmospheric opening gambit: the mixing decks loomed, unmanned, bathed in eerie blue neon at the back of a stark black stage, powering out the theme from the Old Spice advert. The B-boy crowd, bemused by such avant-garde tactics, expressed their dis comfort in uneasy wolf-whistles until the theme reached its stirring surf crescendo and pumped straight into the powerhouse bass beats of Public Enemy. "You're muzzerfooking right!" bawled Kool Shen as he leapt on stage with fellow rapper joey Starr and their adolescent entourage. Straight outta St Denis, an impoverished sub urb north of Paris, stormed Supreme NTM, the arrogant bad boys of French rap. Supreme NTM spout a line in obscene slang and general vul garity that would make even 2 Live Crew blanch. 72 B LIT Z During their first number, 'C'est Clair', Kool Shen raps on about how he fucked the prover bial mother forwards, backwards and sideways, proclaiming himself the "inventeur de /a sodomie verba/e". Doubtful, but it's this kind of declaration which got NTM signed to Epic, who are more interested in Shen's gratuitous provocation than in his Oedipal hang-ups. Epic's release of NTM's slick black-and-white video, directed by Stephane Sednaoui, came just after last summer's student riots where Parisian school kids took to the streets to protest about substandard conditions in locallycees, in a last-ditch attempt to stop their parents eul'o gizing about 1968. Epic realized the time was ripe to market France's first rebels with a cause. Until recently Epic had been coy about what NTM stood for, letting it be put about that it meant "The North Transmits the Message". Now that teenage rebellion has become a fash ionable concept it has been revealed that the group's real title is "Nique Ta ,v/ere" (Fuck Your Mother). If Supreme NTM had been born on the other side of the Atlantic they would probably have had a court injunction slapped on them by now, but censorship laws in France are not so tight. Here television and radio censors are unper turbed by NTM's inflammatory lyrics and the government is prepared to subsidize the group's freedom of speech. In April 1989 the minister of culture, jack Lang, appointed trendy Ileather jacketed Bruno Lion as minister of rock 'n' roll. In 1990 Lion was allotted a budget of 43 million francs to improve the standard of French music at home and spice up its tawdry image abroad. The budget provides aid for rock festivals and independent record labels, and aims to create more live venues. It also funds the programme FAIR (Fonds d'Action et d'initiahve pour Ie Rock) which acts as a rock 'n' roll finishing school for French artists. It trains managers, offers bands business advice and subsidizes them to the tune of 35,000 francs a year. FAIR takes on lifteen groups a year and this year NTM was among them. The decision to fund the group has proved controversial on both sides of the fence. Lang has received fifty letters of complaint so far, some nearly as abusive as Kool Shen himself. NIT M are the first to welcome these complaints, eager to bite the governmental hand that feeds them. "We've got nothing.to do with rock 'n' roll. Why should we be part of the FAIR pro gramme?" snaps joey Starr. NTM claim they have already attempted to cancel their FAIR showcase contract. When this proved some what difficult the posse got stroppy and downed so much tequila that their to Arabs, and in the as yet Fighting the power unrecorded ' C'est Pas la Peine recent appearance as part of is a little Le Pen ', a personal attack on the FAIR lasted barely twenty the head of the French Na minutes. Consequently their problematic when tional Front. backstage behaviour resulted the government is However, when compared in them being banned from with the raw political outrage the Elysees Montmartre, the behind you all the of Public Enemy, whom Lionel venue which hosted the way. Considered as D recently supported, French concert. rap is lacking in radicalism . Those involved in the rap a phenomenon rap One of its most striking fea movement are divided over has been treated as tures is its avoidance of the the sponsorship issue. Savvy J. issue of black nationalism . a 17-year-old rapper from the some spectacle in a French rappers advocate rac ial Vitry suburbs, is suspicious of freak show harmony in their Benetton the government's mixed like slogan "Black-Blanc motives. Fatima legal, organ Beur" (Black-White-Arab ). izer of the recent Fap exhibi tion at the Pompidou Centre, is pleased to see Lionel D urges everyone to live in peace and rap receiving financial aid but is disillusioned harmony ·Ia McCartney, ebony and ivory side that Lang is funding a prominent group while by side on the old piano. Meanwhile NTM , a racially mixed group, are more concerned with ignoring the rest of the rap movement. Her perfecting their colourful language than with letters requesting rehearsal space for young the issue of colour itself. The only black militant breakdancers and video equipment for graffiti rap group in Paris, Amer Posse, are not promi artists remain unanswered . Lionel D, France's nent figures on the rap scene. biggest solo rap act, considers the funding to be The question of prominence is a crucial one . a shrewd political move. He believes that the In England one of the quickest ways for a group government, disturbed by recent rioting in the Paris suburbs, is keen to promote an image of to lose credibility is to appear on Top of the Pops. In France before anyone can accuse a siding with the young in these areas. But spon· soring rap, which is a predominantly suburban band of selling out they have been subsidized , movement, is a poor substitute for rehousing publicized and subsumed under the heading Youth Culture. jack Lang appeared in a recent people or tackling the problems of drugs and issue of VSD magazine, surrounded by IlB , a violence. While NTM's lyrics speak of the horrors of the posse of rap promoters, brandishing ghetto suburban ghettoes, the group refuse to be blasters and sporting the inevitable Public Enemy T-shirts. Lang expressed his full support moulded into spokespeople. " We don' t repres ent the youth of today. We don ' t represent for the rap movement , assigning it a place in anybody," proclaims Kool Shen. The NTM posse cultural history as he compared it to the come across as a bunch of sulky adolescent commedia deJl'arte. He even went so far as to prima donnas, supreme adepts of ego-rap praise graffiti artists, revealing that when con struction was underway on the Louvre officials which glorifies the self and safely avoids addressing any wider issues. NTM are undoubt had erected wire fences to prevent potential edly a bunch of angry young men but their graffiti . Lang immediately had these barriers rebellion is based on james Dean histrionics removed so that the course of free expression rather than Malcolm X texts. joey Starr's only might run smooth. He wondered who "these brush with politics is his favourite rejoinder to extraordinary people could be who created any journalistic inquiry : " Fuok the police! " such marvellous works of art overnight ". Lionel D, at 28, is far more politically aware. Fighting the power is a little problematic when CBS signed the soft-spoken philosophic rapper the government is behind you all the way. six months ago for a three-year contract. His Considered as a phenomenon rap has been treated as some spectacle in a freak show, as a first album , Pas de Probleme , packs a hard hitting message. This is rap which is mightier mutant trend to be sensationalized and exam ined from all angles. George Lapassade, lecturer than the swo rd or, as Lionel himself puts it, " Ia in Ethnography, was among the first to probe poesie contre-attaque ." With deft rhyming, shrewd scanning and ski lful wordplay he tackles the depths of the rap culture. It was no easy feat the problems of violence, drugs and police for Lapassade, who had to "play the B-boys' harassment. His main concern is racism, which game, to enter their world and understand it from within " . You can just imagine the lengths he attacks virulently in :4 Toi Ie Beur', dedicated a to which the grey-haired professor went , bounc ing around in lop-sided baseball cap and high tops, infiltrating the movement with all the panache of a plainclothes policeman. Lapassade has just written the first book in French on the rap movement , entitled Rap ou la Fureur de Dire . A bizarre text which claims to find links between rap and the oral tradition of poetry in Morocco , and between rap and an obscure Basque poetry contest, it ends up pro claiming that rap is the surrealism of the Nine ties. If Lapassade 's theory is to be believed , rap 's roots stretch so ludicrously far back that you would not be surprised to learn that jesus was the first rapper, known to his posse as MC jc. Lapassade's treatise will probably not feature among the standard works on the subject. His slang translations are a little shaky : " junkie" is given as " connard" (stupid bastard) and " higher plane " as " Ie plus haut des avions" ("the highest aeroplane"). The historical errors in th e work are slightly more serious - a quote from Malcolm X is dated 1966, a year after his assassination . Lapassade is also responsible for the intro duction oi rap in French halls of learning. It now appears on the curriculum at the university of St Denis where the education department offers an " Ethnovideo" course which sends students out to film what 's happening in the rap move ment and organizes post -production debates. Th is course is largely made up of students and social workers, B-boys attend as " auditeurs libres" . The arts department offers a "graffiti fresque " course where taggers can shake their aerosols without fear of arrest. Once again there are mixed reactions from those in the rap move ment. Some see this as a means of changing rap 's negative image, all too frequently associ ated with delinquence and violence. Yet many rap veterans consider the institutionalization of rap as a bid to remove its radicalism . Lionel D was offered work teaching one of the courses but refused outright because Lapassade " has missed the essential - that rap is a state of mind, not a phenomenon". It is difficult to see where French rap can go from here. The movement which began by imitating the sounds from across the Atlantic is still struggling to find its own voice. French rap is gradually throwing off its older brother's pre occupation with dicks, bitches and gold chains but all it has to replace these with at present are vague Daisy Age ideals of peace, love and unity. Perhaps the anger and polemiC will come as the movement matures, but at the moment the majority of French rap 's audience is to be found in the school playground and even NTM still live with their parents. • BLIT Z 73 The quest for technological perfection is never-ending. Mark Edwards wonders whether we really need the aggravation he simple fact that we've turned chaos into a theory tells you all you need to know about the human race. Of course, you might argue that we had to turn it into a theory before we could turn it into a buzzword and a market ing concept - that the theory thing was incidental , a pupating state along the way. But no, I think this points to something even more fundamental in human beings than their need to turn everything into a sales tool. The need for magic. By which , of course, I mean science. Or rather, technology. Science was, after all , something you tried to get out of doing at school, whereas technology comes with neat blue LED meters that let you actually 74 B L I T Z watch music .. . just like the professionals. In fact , it's not just technology; it's the need for technology to be perfect. Refining it even further, what the creation of a Chaos Theory points to is the belief that technology, science and also nature is perfect. It's sort of the culmination of the need for things to work perfectly. Chaos, let's remind ourselves, implies the absence of theory. But the easy adoption of the idea that there is a theory of chaos, and that all it takes is one paperback book to come to grips with it , prompts me to suggest that we call a halt to this need to make everything perfect, neat, ordered , labour-free , remote-controlled, graphic -equalized .. . what 's the word I' m looking for ? Idiotproof. I was recently given an old Forties Bakelite radio . Or indeed wireless. You plug it in. And then you switch it on, with a big round button that goes 'clunk' just so you know it's really doing something. You could easily be fooled into thinking that it isn ' t, because when you turn it on what happens is nothing. Sometimes, just for a second, I think " shit" , as in: " Shit , it's broken . I don't know how to fix it. I'll have to have it fixed. It'll cost more to fix it than replace it. So I' ll buy another one. Why doesn ' t anything last? Well, of course it 's deliberate." And then I remember that that's 1991 talking ; that 's what happens in a technologi cally advanced society. What is happening is simply that the wireless is warming up. (Younger readers should be instructed that not very long ago you never, ever saw a person 'warming up' in a yellow velour jogging suit; the verb applied to machines exclusively. ) Some modern machines still warm up, I suppose, but it's called booting or some other such aggressive word . And they do it bloody aggressively too, putting you through some bastard quiz the second you turn them on. Today 's date? Quick, quick , or my screen will go funny. Password? Password? Don't you even remember your own password, dummy? You have to think ; you have to press keys. It looks like it's warming up, but really it's hard at work doing what machines today do best: putting you through your paces, being demanding, causing untold stress. Labour saving nothing. Machines are concentration demanding, mistake-punishing (ERROR ERROR ERROR), humiliating, stress-inducing beasts. What do machines do? First they screw up, and then they tell everyone that they didn't screw up - it was your fault. Human error. They make you feel small. And by extension, the whole human race. Human error. Did the phrase exist before we started inventing machines that made fewer mistakes than us? The day we did that was, as far as I'm concerned , the beginning of the rot. Something horrible happened to society the day we abdicated responsibility to a machine, the day we admitted we couldn't do it as well. It's not even that they do what they're supposed to. (Have you ever seen a paperless office?) It's just that we don ' t know how they do anything. We depend on them, but if they go wrong, we can ' t fix them. (Neither, incidentally, can the people whose job it is to fix them. But that's probably part of some whole other sinister plot that we can't go into here.) In fact we do more than depend on machines. We believe in them. The next generation will be better than the last. The one after that will be better again. Until eventually... well, what? Eventually perfection, of course. Machines are already close to perfection now. They never for example say, ' Oh I can ' t do that.' They either say you haven 't got them ready to do that. Or they just crash. Man . Like, fuck it , you know. The creeps I have to work with. Boot me up again when you're ready to play with the big boys, OK son ? One reason why we never talked about human error before is that human errors never mat1ered very much. They were of the 'oops' variety. It's only when there's a machine on the end of a human error that you have to worry about them - a computer that is now going to print 5 million copies because that's the key you pressed , or a car, a plane, an atom bomb. I record music at home: multitrack recorders, synths and weird digital gizmos that add a lot of sounds and then take them all out again. Just like train spotting, it's a hobby, and those of us who practise it are fanatics. What we 're currently pursuing fanatically is perfect digital sound. And then, when we've got close to it, we try to find a way to make our shiny new perfect digital instruments sound as grungy and dirty and imperfect as a Seventies Moog synthesizer or a Velvets guitar sound. Because they sound nicer than perfection does. And , oh yes, we' re serious. If you said , " Hey, why not ju st go out and buy some old guitars with dodgy electronics and play them o ut of tune through a buzzy amp?" you would be greeted with blank iac es, Int That 's not the point. That would be a retrograde step. We're moving forwards, onwards ... towards something good , something pure. The Master Machine. And yet, although proof to the contrary is every.vhere around us, we persist in the beli ef that a more perfect machine, more advanced technology, produces better results. Oh sure, better results on some technical spec sh eet , yeah. Yet actually, be honest, for every step forward s, they take one backwards. Yes, th ere are gain s, but we always lose something too, Things overall stay pretty much level. But we don't want to believe that. My theory, for what it 's worth , is that we have transferred our desperate desire to believe that life just gets better and better onto technology. Faced with solid evidence that actually life just sort of jerks around unpredictably, we've said that's OK, just so long as something gets better and better. And science said, sure, machines. Let 's go back to the wireless. It 's come on by now. Slowly, The sound just sort of rising up from somewhere. Its little light glowing in the dial. I don't know exactly what all that warming up is all about, although I like to think it's the equivalent of you or I hit1ing the snooze button and grabbing ten minutes more sleep after the alarm has gone, That way, I can bring the wireless down to my level. It doesn't like getting up either. It isn't keener than me. cleverer than me, faster than me. And nobody tells me that in five years it ' ll be able to think for itself. The radio doesn ' t make me feel smal l. Nobody likes to be made to feel small. The idea that there 's something out there that we can't ever understand - that we ' re not meant to understand - makes us feel small. So we grab hold of it , and we turn it into a theory, and we pretend we und e rstand it. And it's a comm odity. But we 're lying to ourselves. Remember when CDs came out , and they were the ultimate, perfect so und system ? And what happened? Since then we've had about half a dozen new types of CD, all with better sound than the last one. Chaos is going to be like that. Ther e' ll be som ething even more chaotic alon g in a minute. We' ll turn that into a theory. And then ... So, I guess our attitude to machines - that they will just keep on getting better - is merely setting US up for continual disappointment. Technology: isn't it great ? Doesn't it give you freedom? No, what it does is it gives you a habit. It hooks you (up). And it's hateful. Great while you ' re up ; fucking awful when you come crashing down. It's nothing new to suggest that technology will eventually kill us all. But what we have to realize is that in th e interim it's making weak , stupid , helpless addicts of us. Picture this. You ' re slumped on the couch watching TV. You want to change channel s. You reach for the remote , It's not there. You look for it. You see that it 's actually farther from you than the TV. What do you do? Walk to the remote? Or just walk to the TV? Answer: you walk to the remote. Because the TV hasn ' t got any buttons on it anymore, Without the remote - the thing that 's supposed to make all this easier - you're helpless, You'd have to find your way into that secret little compartment where they hid the buttons. Only you can ' t remember where it is. You 've been there, right ? And doesn 't it make you feel stupid? So, OK, I may not know how to shift attitudes worldwide. But how about you and I, we confront this whole technology thing? We lessen the habit. We regain our self-respect. Nothing major. We 'll just start gently by taking one day a week , and setting it aside as a day when we have to cope without remotes. Think you can do it? Sure you can, One step at a time, . B L I T Z 75 CUSTOMERSERVICE SUBSCRIPTIONS Order a year's subscription in the UK now and not only w ill we del iver a copy to your door every month - we' ll also pay the postage I Simp ly f,lI in the fo rm on these pages and send it to us with your payment. 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Pornolraphers 2:oq SEX OBJECTS b~ Howard Soole~, Steve Speller, Peter 78 B L IT Z etiquette own In••••'' Malu Halasa on aphrod beautiful can bungle with confidence•••" Michael Bracewell on se*ual'neptltude we've all had a wrist tango•••" John Hind on masturbation hate women, the~ hate themselves•••" Kim Bowen on pornograph~ Calvin, Phil Ward, Merton/Gauster, David Harrison and Lewis Mulater o %12 CREATIVE SEX classic movies, literature and art Inspired b~ the se*uIII muse B LIT Z 79 In the cinema, on the catwalk, on the small screen, sex symbols abound. But do any of them really turn us on? REPORT JONATHAN BERNSTEIN Acid House, Afrocentricity, Almodovar. Perishable pleasures . Distractions from which to be dissociated at the first hint of mass acceptance or obsolescence . We've all declared undying devotion while the other eye scans the room for fresh fields . No love is so great that it can' t later be shrugged off with a self-deprecating shudder. I'm resigned to the rapid turnover in tastes, but I never thought we'd grow out of girls. To which women have we, in the past decade, given the mandate to manipulate our desires and disposable incomes? Only one, and she's the enemy within. There are no female sex symbols anymore because Madonna's everything . Virgin, whore, blonde, brunette, hard , soft, sacred, profane, curved , toned , smart, dumb, vamp, broad , buddy, bitch, icon. Whoever you want. No contemporaries and no competition. Not even among the catwalk hierarchy. Twiggy and Shrimpton had the Sixties, Helvin and Hall had the staying power but never before have so many beautiful young women combined skyscraping profiles and earning capacities . Instantly recognizable in any coun try, in any medium, they are international currency: Models of the Universe. Like Madonna, they're ignited by ambition (Naomi Camp bell 's relocation and immediate acceptance inside the winner's en closure being a textbook example), they're intuitively attuned to the barometer of public taste (scary, teeth-baring Linda Evangelista's snap decision to lengthen her career by lopping off her locks) and they've all got the perfect role model (Madonna). Unlike La Immaculata - well, maybe there's a hiatus in my hormones - these women are tall and poised and clean and co ordinated, but sexy? Claudia Schiffer? She walks like an angel and talks like an ' I-Speak-Your-Weight' machine . Something about these 80 B L I T Z Tat janas, Talisas and Paulinas brings to mind visions of a couture Weird Science, as if, weary of seeking the muse, reality-starved design despots began computer-generating perfection . These wo men - vapid Cindy Crawford and fish-faced Christy Turlington among them - aren't statuesque, they're statues . With even more flawless flora and jauna ready to inherit the crown, most of the mega models are making the move towards acting careers. Well, at least we'll see less of them. Even if the description 'model-turned-actress' wasn't an irremovable stigma triggering im ages of deportment queens falling flat on their faces (honourable exception: Christie Brinkley in National Lampoon's Va cation), the tim ing's off. The female film star doesn't live here anymore. I don't mean the First Ladies (the Streeps and Streisands) or the Women of Substance (Turner, Barkin, Keaton, Lange); I mean movie queens with the international pulling power and basic star heat of Connery, Cruise, Costner and , um, Culkin . The way should have been clear for Madonna to walk away at will with the Last Big Screen Goddess garlands. That she hasn't - and won't - is mainly down to the fact that she' ll never get a film role as good as the real-life one she's written for herself. Also, on record, stage and video, she's in control of the arena. In movies, she's just another player and that's what is going to keep her coming back for more humiliation. This decade-long drought of cinema sex symbols is brought into sharp perspective by the success of Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman. Think about the last time a new young actress was allowed to give such a buoyant, uninhibited performance, swipe scene after scene from the supposed star and walk away with a hugely successful movie. Th·i nk about the last time a young actress generated that kind ~ s~m"ols ~ of cradle-to-grave appeal (think about it - it's the first film my dad's seen since Yentl) . The last few years are dotted with one-shot girls like Bo Derek and Kelly Le Brock but Roberts is the first female in recent history to make a sizable dent in a male-dominated environ ment. Forget the usual suspects. (Kim Basinger isn't sexy. You just think she is . What she is, is components.) The weak female presence onscreen can be directly attributed to the early-Seventies outbreak of Hollywood feminism , a weak-kneed attempt at reflecting changing values. Movies like The Turning Point and An Unmarried Woman packaged images of this new indepen dent, liberated fictional female, even if, in most cases, independence stood for not capitulating too early when Mr Right (the require ments of the new era replaced the millionaire with someone who worked with his hands) showed up to take her away from all this . The female sex sy mbol, quite rightly, had no place here . These were the years of quirky, twitchy, birdlike women: Shelley Duvall , Karen Black, Jill Clayburgh, Geraldine Chaplin, Valerie Perrine, Sally Kel lerman, Ellen Burstyn, Susan Anspach et al. Their jackets suddenly appeared to be hanging on loose nails as a trio of blockbusters set the agenda for years to come. Rocky, Star Wars and Animal House opened the tloodgates for a tidal wave of action films, goofball comedies and sound-and-light shows. This in tum led to the situation which took hold in the mid-Eighties and which still exists. Not only are all the most-exposed , highest earning, seat-filling stars male, but they're either Action Man or superstar comedians . The guys with guns - Schwarzenegger, Stal lone, Willis, Gibson - see a lot of action but little of it between the sheets. Their shirts are off, pecs oiled, chest heaving - but the only flesh they're hot for is the bad guy they're out to squish . They don't seem too comfortable around women. Even Gibson, to my mind a component like Kim Basinger (you only think you like him), is always much more at ease snuggling up to Danny Glover than any of his leading ladies. Schwarzenegger has been paired off with an absolute boatload of babes - Grace Jones, Rae Dawn Chong, Maria Conchita Alonso, Sharon Stone, Penelope Ann Miller - and still hasn't relaxed enough to get past that tight-lipped, kissing-your auntie peck. Pick the screen diva of your choice: Monroe, Bardot, Dietrich, Hayworth, whoever. They all inhabited larger-than-life roles - they drove men cra zy with passion, induced them to commit murder, schemed to get them to the altar, broke up families. Films aren' t big enough to hold that sort of women anymore. The big juicy parts go to men with big juicy parts. But, in a way, the Action Man is the latter-day descendant of the movie queen. Don't they sort of perform the same function? They release the same scaled-up emotions and perform to the optimum in a melodramatic medium. They both bleed, they both suffer, they both cry. One's got a gun, the other a gown but they're sisters under the skin. On the other hand , that Eighties phenomenon, the superstar comedian, is very comfortable around women . At times it seems his entire career is dedicated to proving he can get dates . Almost all the convulsions in Cosmo thinking: 'Fat Men Are Sexy' , ' Bald Men Are ~ V> -< Cl ~ » Richard E Grant Photograph David Woolley • 84 Sexy', ' Big Noses? Big Heart!' - are down to the inexorable rise of these guys, mostly ex-Saturday N ight Live and Second City TV alumni. These men had the magic touch. They saved stinkers. No matter how rank the picture, the presence of a Steve Martin, Robin Williams, Eddie Murphy, Chevy Chase, Michael Keaton, John Candy or Rodney Dangerfield could usually be relied upon to bring out the faithful. Women in these movies were very often no more than stooges or visual punchlines, but occasionally the union of clown and actress produced romantic sparks which impacted on public thinking. Remember barely-in-shape John Cleese fooling around with lithe Jamie Lee Curtis? Are balding, sagging middle aged men sexy? Bill Murray and Sigourney Weaver in Ghostbusters. Do women respond to a smirk and a snide sense of humour? Tom Hanks in Big: let her know you're just a little boy at heart. Steve Martin in Roxanne: personality matters more than physical perfection. Women I spoke to about the stand-up men as sex symbols claimed another victory for superior female taste and intelligence: "We look deeper. We don't care about the flaws. A sense of humour is more important than good looks. All you care about is surface. All men really want is two tits, a hole and a heartbeat." Which just shows how little the sexes understand each other. (Who said anything about a heartbeat?) This female altruism leads us on to the Inexplicable Sex Symbol. Mickey Rourke - he's virtually got mushrooms growing out of him these days. John Malkovich - bald , fey, colourless, slit-eyed and B LIT Z slimy, yet his femal e fans are stuck to their seats and his male admirers are in awe of this man who was Valmont, who obviously still inhabits the same soul of the master seducer, who has had knowl edge of both Uma Thurman and Michelle Pfeiffer. Okay, they're not Madonna and, of course, there are no female sex symbols anymore, but ... Uma's a special case. Like most gents, I'll express boundless admiration for those Euro gals: Daile, Adjani, Huppert, Baye, Bouquet, Ardant (I'm an Ardant admirer), Muti, Schygulla and Olin. Catch me sitting through one of their films, though? I think not. For me, and guys like me, Uma Thurman is an answered prayer. She's a Hollywood actress. She's got the stillness, the mysticism, the lyricism, the 16th-century bell adonna complexion, the willingness to get her gear off before the first scene change and no Bertrand Blier, no clouds of Gitane smoke, no tinkly-tonkly French pop on the soundtrack . In Dangerous Liaisons, Michelle Pfeiffer, long a shimmering but shadowy presence in second-string roles (Scarface , Ladyhawke, Illto the Night), revealed a hitherto unsuspected talent for suffering. Not since Garbo (you remember Garbo, the Lena Olin of her day) has a beautiful woman expired so exquisitely. In The Fabulous Baker Boys, she brought back the broad - slinky, wise cracking, at her best in male company. She slinks, she suffers - if she does them both in one movie, she's a star. Lacking Action Man, superstar comedians or Madonna, the UK isn't much of a hothouse for budding sex symbols. If we can set aside the eerie, enduring Charlotte Rampling - those gimlet eyes • •••~: Caron Keating Photograph David Woolley Styling Joy Andrews at Mandy Coakley MdKe...m Kim Crocker at Manna Jones Bug e Beaded Dress Katharine Hamnett ShOt at Oldl Studios BL I TZ 85 s~mbols ~ promlsmg dirty uptown sex - as an English European Actress, we're left with the stop-motion ripening and rotting of under employed former child actresses: Judy Geeson, Fiona Fullerton, Jenny Agutter and, the most stunning of them all, Lesley-Anne Down. Not since Liz Taylor at her most tangible ... those eyes, that mouth, that skin ... I know, all surface. The one hope for these girls is the lifeline that's saved many an ageing American star. Television. Sean Connery never won so many 'Sexiest Man Alive' plaudits as when he ditched the rug. Jack Nicholson's star went through the roof the moment he exposed his paunch. But the audience - the female audience, especially - doesn't want to see the ageing actress fight ing a losing battle with gravity on the big screen. On the small screen, the world turns upside down. The woman's picture is alive and well in the form of the TV movie. Joan Collins, Cybill Shepherd and Candice Bergen finally became stars (and mark my words, Lauren Hutton will follow suit) and are celebrated as survivors. The same sanctuary awaits the Seventies tabloid sex kittens. But then, you never know with the British. In Page Three's infancy, The Sun aroused its slugs with a remarkable array of beautiful women: Jilly Johnson, Nina Carter, Vivien Neves, Erica Creer and Felicity Buirski among them, all aristocratic jawlines, luscious blonde Other ness and chilly glamour. All these girls tried to synergize their allure into something more profitable: singing, acting. Did any of them succeed? (No.) A decade on and Page Three is the province of puppy-fat queens. Milkmaids like bum-faced Sam Fox, Linda Lusardi and Maria Whittaker win the affections of the nation, achieve chart success, game show employment and detached dream houses in the stockbroker belt. The British feel comfortable with the comfortable. Maybe that means that the only real Great British Sex Symbols are the ones we see every night. Their very familiarity binds them inextricably into the fabric of our subconscious. They flounce through our most inadmissible after-hours fantasies. The prim women, the brisk wo men, the exports. Maybe there's a lifelong male need to be moth ered, nannied, teachered and nursed. Maybe we all share the common hope that beneath those twinsets lurk wild things. Remember Angela Rippon's tenure as first woman newsreader? She held the country in thrall. Your breathing was in tempo to the rise and fall of her eyebrows. There was no escape from that cool but laser-sharp stare. The efficient women, the ones who seem calm but whose silk blouses conceal volcanic eruptions. These are the Great British Sex Symbols. Anna Ford, Carol Barnes, Joan Bakewell, Kirsty Wark, Penny Junor, Sarah Dunant, Delia Smith, Jancis Robin son, the wine expert, the one who spits with contempt. For once, the female prerogative doesn't come into play. Nobody - at least nobody who's able to manage solid food without assistance - would make a case for the erotic delights promised by Nicholas Witchell, Jeremy Beadle, Giles Brandreth, Sir Alistair Burnett or John Sta pleton. In a world where the vamp, the broad, the siren and the goddess have been succeeded by the wife, lover and significant other, there remains at least one area where the female sex symbol reigns supreme. Come on Delia, justify my love . • Barney Sumner Photograph David Woolley Jim Shelley on what makes good sex I PHOTOGRAPH Hugues Roussas What makes good sex? Here's the moral. There is no such thing. There is no such thing as 'good sex'. It's a tough one to swallow. Good sex is not good for you. If it strikes, good sex is in fact the worst thing that can happen to you. A disaster. You will never recover. You always want more. You never stop. Good sex is hard to find, hard to follow and hard to forget. When you have good sex, you want it again - with the same person or the next. And sex, like sleep, is never the same twice . The more you want it, the harder it gets. Rememberillg how it got so good is so difficult. You compromise for good sex, you tolerate. You make a (bad) relationship to suit the (good) sex. Good sex will make your life more miserable than bad sex: sex is intrinsically unsatisfying. Even when it's good. Especially when it's good. For one thing it always ends. When good sex ends, you start s uffering. What if you will never have good sex again? You will never know. At least bad sex can get better. Anyone who saw David Attenborough's Trials of Life will know animals have not made sex one of life's trials : you do not see antelopes attempting Position 47. No. Animals have two positions: front and back. Animals do not blindfold each other with palm leaves or shove twigs up their arses. Buffalo do not dress up as bison . Man has made a terrible mistake with sex. We have complicated sex with such energy and imagination that there is no way out. Man has distorted sex, perverted it. Human sex is not about procreation at all: all of us are accidents these days, born as a tragic, unintentional crisis. It's almost as if, as we grow up (I use the term lightly), we get our own back on sex. We fuck with it. We fuck about with sex, because, the way we look at it, sex started it. Humans gambled on sex being about pleasure and have been trying to win their money back ever since. Man's enthusiasm for accessories and fetish has taken sex so far away from its initial purpose, it has only one conclusion. The safe bet in sex is solo sex , self sex. Anything else is so complex. More than money or ambition, sex wrecks. Sex is the commonest currency of marital diplomacy, emotional blackmail. In any relationship (friend or foe), sex is a time bomb that usually goes off. In your face. You can steal from your friends, assault them, but having sex with them jeopardizes and complicates everything. The pressure for good sex wrestles the fear of failure. You compete against the time before and the lover before . Love and sex are practically incompatible (mutually destructive chemicals). The best sex is sex with strangers, silent sex or sex with someone who doesn't speak English. You have nothing to lose. You insist on satisfaction. Of course, auto-sex is safer and much more reliable. Au to-sex (not sex wi th cars, although sex on a ca r bonnet is 88 BL IT Z good sex), S & M, voyeurism, masturbation and fetishes arc the future. AIDS is just a good excuse. You can now buy deluxe dolls in America (real hair, realistic genitalia, yours for between £750 and £2,000) that are advertised as "better than the real thing': And who are we to argue? These dolls are actually less artificial than half the girls in Los Angeles. Voyeurs are never bored, never dissatisfied. There is always something to watch. Being watched is good sex. From a window or from the end of a bed. Masturbation is fine as long as someone is there to enjoy it. Fetishes are the hot tip for the Nineties. A fe tish (lipstick, stile ttos, a piece of blue velvet, someone's scent, a piece of well-shaped metal) is an exquisitely intimate, personal thrill. What it means to you, gives you, is unique. It cannot fail. You have the thrill of the denial and then the reward. Its satisfaction is guaranteed. Plus you don't have to talk to it afterwards or make it breakfast in the mornin g ... I have a hotel fetish. Rule: the more expensive the hotel , the better the sex. Naked sex pressed against the glass of a twenty-fourth-storey window with only the glass to bite on is good sex. With hotels, underwear, drugs, accessories, prostitutes, the moral is: the rich have better sex. Telephone sex: talk to me. Don' t talk to me about shopping, talk to me, angel. Some people's voices are the sexiest part of them : use it. Use them. Telephone them. Oral sex while you're on the phone is very good sex. Video telephones are the voyeurs' dream. And they're coming. Talking dirty is one of sex's few indisputables. Truly democratic. Something that unites us . "Upa bit", "Down a bit" (Golden Shot sex), "I adore you". "You filthy bastard ". "Fuck me, fuck me, stick your big hot cock up my pussy." Like high heels, exciting underwear, expensive underwear, or no underwear, everyone likes it. When someone sighs your name, you know it's good sex (unless it's the wrong name) then it's a case of: "Pretend I'm him ." Fat sex fetish: fat sex is comfortable certainly, like iucking a trampoline. It's fun. Sex is not meant to be fun, though. Not in that Crackerjack way. Coloured condoms turn sex into a gimmick, a novelty. Good sex will, of course, be better without a condom - like riding bareback. Condoms, like objects, do not feel as good as the real th ing. Uncased, it's warmer. It's stronger. Sadly, stupidity is not sexy. And besides, never mind the fear of AIDS, the fear of babies is another matter. Durex Gold are paramount. Even if they do taste vile. For the orally fixated, ioreplay is sexier than fucking. The sexiest thing you can do to someone is kiss them. Sixty minu tes of humping is obviously tiresome. Sixty minutes is not sex. It's a dOCllmentary. ~ goodse~ • Mindless bovine stamina is not sexy. The key to oral sex is appetite. You would hope to have sex not with someone who wants the taste of you but someone who needs the taste of you . Some girls actually hate oral sex . No boys do. This is another one of sex's indisputables . Men will have oral sex with a labrador if it's going . Women are so fussy. Fellatio is more unpleasant than cunnilingus : women taste better. But women complain men take too much pleasure from the submis sion. This is sexist. The submission is the same in fellatio as it is in cunnilingus. If men give bad head, 1V0men should simply learn to rel ish their humiliation. Some men maintain there's only one thing wrong with cun nilingus: the view. Not me . Watch everything . Watch her watching you . The disadvantages to cun nilingus, of course , are temporary deafness, dizziness, an offset nose . On the plus side, it's good snorkelling practice. Do not stop until he/she is tearing her hair out - yours or theirs. Kissing is the cream on the cake. You've got to feel sorry for men. They get no help. No one tells them anything. Women do not draw diagrams . Lacking the proper instruc tion, men will perform cunnilingus as Lf they were weather-proofing someone, instead of, say, drawing the alphabet. Confused and ignorant, men have fallen for every trick in the (sex) book , every myth. Obsessed with size (big pricks, big tits), tormented by the multiple orgasm, totally gullible to the fake orgasm, the fear of being left out has driven men mad , driven them to pornography. They don't know any better. Men are the victims of porn: they think women will be like that. They think sex will be like that. Men are trapped going through the magazine motions. Good sex is inventing your own pornography. Amuse yourselves. Disgust yourselves but above all be yourselves. Have sex not to know the person but to know yourself, or forget yourself. Good sex is about your filthy passion, the shameless longing to be doing that exact act with that one person on the globe, to have the person inside every possible part of you , to communicate something that cannot be otherwise communicated , that possibly cannot be communicated. About intensity, intensity and belonging . Likewise, men are the victims of prostitution. The myth is: sex is better with prostitutes. It is' But it costs a grand. Watching a prostitute chomp on a condom is not really sex. It's an expensive lesson in discomfort, only sexual in the shame it infers on you. The prostitution fantasy is women's clever revenge. Inexpensive prostitutes are not exciting. Good sex should be about excitement - illegality is sexy; adultery is sexy. Sex with relatives, sex on the church steps, in the library - pressed against the works of your favourite author, in alleyways, supermarkets, car parks, staircases, at the zoo (with the animal voyeurs), on the television rather than on video, in planes or trains but not automobiles (unless they're moving). Face down all a mirror . This is good sex. It has been suggested that beauty is a burden . I do not buy this. I mean, don't be too beautiful. But be beautifuL Ugliness is never sexy. Intellect and humour are sexier than classic good looks . Good sex is elder women, younger men, people born on the same day as you. Sex with someone you hate. Good sex is tender as long as it's not mutual tenderness, when sensuality and savagery occur in the same second. Sex with virgins is uniquely wonderful. Girls who look like boys. Love and sex are practically incompatible (mutually destructive chemicals). The best sex is sex with strangers, silent sex or sex with someone who doesn't speak English 90 B LI T Z Men who look like real men. Sex with someone who looks just like you. Mmmmh. Sex with one boy and one girl rather than two couples. Women who know how to sodomize a man are always an asset. Funny sex is better than serious sex. Blood and tears are better than sweat . Sex that hurts is good because at least you know you're having sex. Dressed sex is essential. To end in a state of heated disarray is the idea: one shoe, torn T-shirt, expensive underwear around your expensive ankles. Then you've had good sex . A hat always adds something. Disincentives to good sex would include: red underwear, hairy backs, cold feet, coughing. Someone who is considered 'good in bed' - better someone who isn't: uncertainty is sexy. Some people are just sexier at receiving. You never have good sex with someone who's overweight, lumpy unless they're fat. Or with someone who's tired. Unless they're tied . Or asleep. It simply won' t be that good . Do not think about what you're doing, unless it's three days before . Slow sex is better than fast sex. Cold is better than hot. Bad sex is better than no sex (shame has its own delight, failure its own rewards: sex that makes.you sad is exquisite). No sex at all is better than 'normal' sex - sex at the end of the day, in bed, with someone you neither desire nor need but simply live with. This is not sex. It's habit. The best sex is a match , an extreme and intense match of extremism and intent. When you'll do anything, have done anything, so will your partner. Good sex requires an imbalance - a taker and the taken, initiative and jeopardy, just the right amount of fear, anticipation. One to lose and one to attain total control. Make it up as you go. Do not be ashamed. Do not be afraid . • SEXY BUT SAFE AT 25% OFF Subscri be to BLITZ t his month and we'l l make you a SEXY BUT SAFE offer you can' t refuse: The SEXY BUT SAFE subscri pt ion comp ri ses An exclusive limited edition BLITZ SEXY T-shirt, celeb rating th is issue. This is white, long sleeved, 100% cotton and eco-friendly, with the logo prin ted in silve r across the chest, and a discreet BLITZ logo on t he breast SEXY A packet of three MATES condoms, A full year's subscription to BLITZ. Normal ly the w hole pack wou ld cost more than £4000, but 'you can ta ke ad vantage of our special offer and make a 30% saving. Th e cost of the SEXY BUT SAFE subscri ption is £30. 00. Simply complete the form below and return it to us, toget her w ith your cheque o r VISA/Access ca rd d etai ls. Alterna tively fax it to us on 071-436 5290. PLEASE NOTE: the pri ces given above apply to UK subscribers on ly. The rates for ove rseas su bscribers are as follows: Europe (or worldwide su rface mail) £3 5.00 ; Outsi de Europe (ai rmail) c on do ms eleQroniallly tes1ed £65.00. Orde rs mus t be received by Marc h 14th 1991 and will begin with the May issue Price includes postage an d packing. ORDER FORM Name : D I enclose a cheque payable to BLITZ MAGAZINE fo r the amo unt of £:34.95 D Please charge my VISA cred it card f or the amount of £ 34.95 Address : Cardholder Name ADDRESS TO WHICH THE SUBSCRIPTION & PACK SHOULD BE SENT: (PLEASE PRINT IN BLOCK CAPITA LS) Card No Postcode: SEND TO: SEXY BUT SAFE BLITZ MAGAZINE 40/44 NEWMAN STREET LONDON W1P lPA IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Expiry Date < 1 _ _ _- ' _ - ' Signature ' - - - - - - - -- - - -- - -- - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - -- - - - -----_._ Karen Krizanovich on what makes good sex I "I feel like a million tonight - but one at a time." This quote from the irrepressible Mae West illustrates the primary reason why good heterosexual sex for women is so very different from what it is for men. It is impossible to ignore the simple biological fact that only women have the potential to enjoy sex almost perpetually. Even the usually wholesome Mark Twain compared women to silver can dlesticks which always yearned for a candle, even when such candles were so easily burned out. Basically, the major requirement for a man to please a woman is stamina. Basking in the afterglow of a long bout of brilliant sex is a woman's physical equivalent to winning the pools .Usually, however,a woman is left perusing the ceiling, pondering the absurdity of detumescence while her satiated partner is already fast asleep - in the same position that he fell in battle, drooling on the pillow, too fatigued to dream. Given half a chance, women have a frighteningly large sexual scope - more than men know. They can afford to have a sense of humour abou t male performance. After all, they can have a laugh w ithou t their own sexual capabilities coming to a screeching hal,t. Yet most d'o not feel free to express their own lusts: traditionally only men are such animals. Because the active sex partner is the one in control, it turns a man's wor:ld topsy-turvy if a woman rugby-tackles him onto a bed, rips open his clothes and initiates sex at flash point. In a man's logic, this means that the woman likes sex, and if she likes it so much, then she must be a whore. Fellatio then becomes the only active thing a girl can do within her rights. Many enjoy it with someone they really like, but even then, as someone once said: "You know the worst thing about oral sex? The view." What's a girl to do? 92 B L I i 2: PHOTOGRAPH HUGUES ROUSSAS I With the amazing success in America of Robert Bly's book Iroll JOilll, a socio-psychological journey which goes beyond 'the new man' to examine the 'eternal' man of today, it is clear that more and more menfolk are unhappy with the static polarities between the sexes. If it is to be granted that men should be free to shed a few tears in public, women also need to be allowed a modicum of sexual assertion. This is not to say that every woman is unfulfilled unless she trucks down to Expectations and purchases a strap-on dildo (fashionable black rubber, one size fits all and cheap at £45). But it is healthy to assume that within every man lurks someone who longs to be ravished, just as every woman is, in her heart of hearts, a man-eater. Until this is realized, each gender will continue to suspiciously eye the other as the enemy - especially during the act of 'love' - because stepping outside the rules of who's on top tends to threaten how we think of ourselves even when fully clothed and vertical. Good sex for women requires sensitivity. During sex, a man's attention is centred exclusively on his John Thomas. For a woman, however, the act involves her entire body, mind and spirit. While men are conditioned to rely on visual stimuli (women rarely wear sexy underwear for themselves), female pleasure is enhanced through smell, taste, touch and sound. Men who are not stingy with soap and water, who know how to use a toothbrush, who trim their nails and are aware of how they sound, are veritable playgrounds. Unhappily, these men are rare exceptions. The differences between the sexes body hair, muscularity, height, vocal quality, etc - are certainly exciting, but when women say, "He's so lovable when he's rumpled," and, "It really makes me randy when he smells of axle grease," they really mean, "God, why isn't he a member of my own species?" Variety ("Conventional sexual intercourse is like squirting jam into ~ goodse~ ~ a doughnut," said Germaine Greer) is almost as important for a woman as quantity and quality. Women's sexual imagination stretches ad infinitulII. Hence, a man who is a dab hand at gymnastics, weightIifting, beM-wrestling, scuba diving and pushing pennies across the Sahara with his nose will fare better in bed than the chap who practises kissing on the back of his hand. It is always wrong to think that it woman is not ready for anything a bit daring if she doesn't suggest it herself. She is waiting for her partner to read her mind. Stamina, openness, skill and imagination will not guarantee good sex for a woman. Bad sex comes in all forms. Like AIDS, it does not discriminate between people, places and time. Bad sex is more than yelling "ob mama mama mama" ilt the point of climax, more than discovering a new lover has had his penis shot off in the war. Sex is bad when }TOtllillg happens (no matter what gadgets, positions, fantasies, drugs or words are used to ameliorate the situation) in the space one has specifically cleared for intense pleasure . 'Disap pointed ', 'crestfa llen', 'jaded', ' homicidal' Jnd 'about to join a con vent' are word s which apply to women who have had a sexual diet dangerou,ly low in plea~ure. For a man tv please a WO Illan, he must underst,uld the immut,lble law of the female body. Thl' bL'st sex fur her will almust ine vitably involve the most backbrea king, jaw-tiring, sinew-straining, suba lju.1tic posi tion possible for him. Because women have mure stamina and flexibility than men, extremes of duration, repe tition or strength are mandatory fm her journey to nirvana. If he hilS an intimate knowledge of Tantric yoga, the Kamasutra and the Rama Lamil Ding Dong, he had better use it. To be sure, women will say they are happy with regular, meat-and potatoes, missionary position sex (with a fair smattering of tender talk, kissing dnd cuddling as prologue a/ld epilogue) but really, there is only Olle unmistakable joy. The various acceptable forms of climax the vagi nal, G-spot, rnentdl and emotional - are all well and good, but nothing beats good clitoral stimuliltion. Thi s is not always an easy task: patient wvmen helve been known to compose symph mies while wditing for their lover~ to tind exactly the right spot and stay there. "He's great with his hand s" is the highl'st accolade a man can receive - it steJlIS solely frum hi s hard-wu n. 1 Iud) prd(ti sed s kill. not natural att ribu t e ~. Cunn ill l1E;u:, is dlld th,, 1 .)rt tl)Ln. :,till1ulatIllg as a good slIug IlldY be, when a \\'UD ld!! wh l"ptof , "U ~lll ldk ll ly l.tbhl , yo u fuvtbztll pl. y i.)g b"lk .. .) tllall ~h, . lIld I n t ·.\ " .l ci ", tv whiL'h lab id "he is rde: I il b' Ul durtll l1ak l}, . J , I ~ L).. i s d dLJllbk edged ~\\ urd. Performed with brio, it is better than a holiday in Mauritius. But woe to any man who commits the unforgivable error of tr~!jng to negotiate this difficult terrain and then gets lost. If a fellow can use a map to drive from London to Birmingham, he has no excuses for missing the female off-ramp to ecstasy. If he gets confused, he can always ask directions . Women appreciate the kind of erection that is \vorth y of worship. The whys and wherefores of intercourse are obscured by yet another male misconception. Although women are too considerate to say so, cock size does matter. It is a universal law that bigger is better, regardless what one can do with it. Unlike breast size (which has more to do with visual arousal than anything else), science has yet to come up with decent solutions for men who lack grandeur in the trouser compartment. The only answer is for the unfortunate one to become better at oral and manual sex, and to be as rich, generous, tolerant and handsome as is humanly possible . On the other hand, a male member which in size resembles a baby's arm holding an apple can provide more pain than pleasure. Of course, For a man to please a wom,a n, he must understand the immutable law of the female body. The best sex for her will inevitably involve the most sinew-straining position possible for him 94 BL: TZ \,yomen who fear that their own equipment may be too capacio ll s for even Godzilla will need to practise kougels (vaginal exercises). An alternative tu finding a tight fit is ana l sex. Although only the shameless will admit it, this is widely practised among more adven turous heterosexuals. However, it is dangerous, messy and addictive - or as one woman told me: "I never have anal sex anymore because it feels too good." Ideally, for every womdn there sho uld be a man whose physical attributes are perfect - that is, just large enough so that every act of intercourse makes her feel a bit, er, virginal. Men should not be fooled bv the veil of femininity, nor should they fear the female appetite. With a little care , any male can learn the female laws of good sex by tapping into his own passivity. They shou ld try to understand what it is like to be ferocious and tame, demanding and forgiving, absurd and serious. Good sex for a woman s pans metaphysical as well as physical boundaries. In short, we are llutrageous creatures who probably have more sexual knowlege than we'll ever use. But we'll never let on. • LEADING THE FIGHT AGAINST AIDS Anyone - woman , man or child - can be affected by HIV, the virus which breaks down the body's immune system and lays it open to AIDS. Any of us could suddenly discover that someone in our family, a friend or colleague, is H IV Positive or has developed AIDS. Since 1,983, The Terrence Higgins Trust has often been the first point of call for those whose life has suddenly been changed by H IV infection or AIDS. Last year we took over 15,000 phone calls from people seeking help. Worried - but well - wives, lovers, parents, children, as well as those diagnosed ill, all turned to us . WHO KNOWS WHEN MIGHT NEED US? We are the UK's leading voluntary agency dealing with all aspects of HIVand AIDS, channelling the efforts of over 800 specially trained people - the vast majority of whom are volunteers . Our fight is on two fronts. With information and education we combat ignorance and fear, teaching simple measures we can all take to protect ourselves . And we offer hope, inspiration and practical support to people affected by HIV or AIDS , their partners, families and friends. You can help the spread of information, and limit the spread of AIDS byfinding out the facts foryourself.We will willingly send you a free FACTS and ACTION pack but, if you can, please include a donation to to ensure we will be here whenever we're needed. Do it today. We need you now. -------------Post to : The Fundraising Manager, The Terrence Higgins Tru st. FREEPOST. London We1 8BR (A stamp saves us money.) Please send me more det ails about what I can do to prev ent the damage done by AIDS. (Mr/ Mrs/ M s) Initi al Chan ty Reg . N o . Z B B5Z7 Nam e Address Postcode I am donating D [20 D [25 D [50 D [100 Other [ I enclose a cheque made payable to The Terrence Higgins Trust -------------- The rags to riches history of king condom REPORT MARK HONIGSBAUM "I love thee much - Let me unseal the letter" - King Lear Johnny, eel skin, rubber, bishop's joy bag, Malthus Sheath, gay gum. For over 400 years now - ever since King Charles II's physician, Dr Condom, supposedly gave his name to it - we've been trying to avoid 'the C word'. Indeed, there must be more euphem isms for the condom than any other con traceptive known to man, and that's just counting the English language (in France the French letter is known as fa capote Angfaise, or the English trench coat). Compared to other forms of contraceptive or prophylactic the condom, clearly, is king. Indeed, with the advent of AIDS, HIV and the marketing war between Durex and Mates, the condom has become so ubiquitous that it is no longer enough to utter the C word; as the marketing of condom earrings last Christmas showed, "Don't just say it, display it." How did we ever ret an eight-inch (standard size) sock of vulcanized rubber get so big? In the Sixties and Seventies condoms were asso ciated with dirty old men and a furtive quickie behind the bicycle shed. In fact, that's where you were most likely to come across one, curled up in a sticky clump of grass. And let's face it, it's never done much for the sex act, even if you've been with your partner long enough to know that he/she doesn't have AIDS and won't go off the boil while you pull one on. The answer lies in thE: condom's unique combination of prophylactic (disease pre venting) and contraceptive qualities, coupled 96 B LIT Z with the erasure of the lingering prudishness which until recently prevented advertisers touting the sheath's manifest advantages. As a result the condom is no longer seen as an impediment to pleasure so much as an essen tial accessory before the act. As the current Health Education Authority adverts on the tube say, "If you're leaving your inhibitions behind take these with you." According to Mates Healthcare, 147 million condoms were sold in Britain last year, 30 percent more than in 1985 when AIDS began to impinge on most heterosexuals' con sciousnesses, and sales are projected to rise by another 5 percent this year. But while condoms may never have been as much in fashion as they are today, history shows there has always been a demand for them. As long ago as 3000 BC men were wrapping their organs in sheaths, not only as protection against flies and evil spirits but also for deco rative purposes. The Egyptians made them out of linen, the Chinese used oiled paper and the Japanese made condoms from horn and tortoiseshell. During the Dark Ages, when contraception was considered a crime worthy of the stake, records of their use are Virtually non-existent - but it is hard to believe that the odd monk wasn't privvy to their secrets. The earliest modern reference to the condom came in a book published in 1564 by Gabriello Fallopio - the Italian doctor who discovered the fallo pian tubes - where he prescribed linen sheaths soaked in herbs and salts as a means of preventing the spread of venereal disease. However, FaUopio's sheaths were rather pain ful to use and it was only with the discovery that sheep-gut made for a more comfortable fit that the condom as contraceptive was really born. Legend has it that the sheep-gut version was invented by Dr Condom to safeguard King Charles against squiring unwanted claimants to the throne, but recent scholar ship suggests that the actual inventor may have been a Colonel Quondam, a Royalist army physician during the English civil war (see Johnny Come Lately: a Short History of the Condom, by Jeannette Parisot). Fragments of animal-gut condoms have been found at Du dley Castle in the West Midlands, occu pied by Royalists under the colonel's command when Cromwell beseiged the castle in 1645. Follow ing the Royalists' defeat it is thought the colonel changed his name to Dr Cundum to avoid detection, but somehow memory of his eponymous invention lived on. Others believe the word derives from the Latin verb cOlldere (to contain), or even from the phrase cum domine, which has a nice ring to it. Whichever is the case, by the end of the 18th century when a Mrs Philips began sell ing condoms from a warehouse in Half Moon Street, London, the name had clearly stuck. By the 19th century, condoms were being advertised by manufacturers as Malthus Sheaths, an ironic reference to the economist, Robert Malthus, who theorized that the world would succumb to famine unless the rapid growth in the world's population was control led. By 1880 a visitor to Petticoat Lane could pick up condoms bearing portraits of Gladstone and Queen Victoria, but opposi tion to the sheath remained strong. Followers MALTHUS SHEATHS, AI •.• 1. ...._ THE POOR MAN'S FRIEND. • • l .d'" " ...,.. •.• •Uti.... /', •..-fuh n. ,', ... , 01" • • , .!.... T;,I~I;.''',,,J~ ~,,:,~:~,,;i~~~~;' 1~~~ln "~~I t:;~~~~II/'~ ';;:'~I~;~!; tro,,, '\'"",.:01 S III II. It i~ WI,,"" I,), stn' )!!l_ b",,,l, 'n(1 I'lTett u:o.lly prt:\"O:! nh ~,.,,,~,, 1. -",.: "'~••:l'''I1Ic:-t1 1,,1', IJlll ]>1""I"di,"c '-"'I:"n ~. Ir lld~... /HC "" lirn ',h:'II perfectly o.(/unJ .:o ra] S~.)'2 ,,,e.i:~~,:S"'~~J )~~~~~:lr~tt" [ (,nn ~ TH£ COMBINED PESSARY AND SHEATH "'II ,e.Ue~ ~'1uality '. d( ~~.~'.!;- C~:~:f..:i~~':~;:· :-7:··:.~' the TI~ til ~ :.izh, Xo. I ..mall, '1•• ,"".I.... 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I't"~ ,,',~'~'i: ~lJd 51- 1!1,<: h. ".,,, w.:,.~ ! · '- /111 ....' l. " \,'ll .... ".,.1 " r Ib W " "~' I'>'.. (at ..... ,I"U'II \I,. h-\lml'l(l~,lt ... 1.1 1 If <lr.l '-lC"J., ,,'lliOC.I,,r.at Ninl{ ,'-' Ild.lr\ll::I I<JrI:>. lb.- . j.lpll~ '.1X ''''')" to: .,f•. r"' Cotf,,., . !,I· liCn~. 1 1:.,,,,,,to.:.,.. r.uoJ "'itl, (C''' ''V1..tv Cumpiclc in UOJ:. wil h direclioos for uSl" , 2/6. SPEC IAL SIZ ES 10 Order, 4 /· e.ch. OUR LATEST SAFEGUARD. u<:I"i: hC['1 1(10 !""h Solll,»k. 1,' . 10. - 11 ')1":11 l\ll'(,~T,....-T,-O 1:" 1"11 .. ("II THE A n~" t"~JII ECLIPSE f,,''''l h ~IIlHII ... SHEATH. !.r ~!~hto 1.l ~ SI"-" It.. , ·. ~oc(',lH.\· !",red..o IIIJI II c~n I.e UNd .r,y ",rc~ 1 ..,.)n\·rui'",~e "U[l ,~ ~ 1<1 R I"" .r;~ fl f I.... ' f',r m" " ,I, .jfl .r" I",rly u......d ",;a,t ~ .wj I '~\' o f IImt:l.n",. I'r"\"I I1 ': 1M... '" I, ",·ill I lm'I ._.~ Full dircctions wilh cach lIrticle. Price 2/.. elich. Ily II,,· 11'.,' " I Ih;~ .1 pp.,r;\:1I~. M.,Ir. (I,.., ;:"1 11.' .111 , ' "be- r,'-: oI1ed 1· 'I'.JI I" ,..,"' , .• h, r IJ,·IIt~ lI ~ ..:J . :l f1I! lhc !.Ie ;;I1\1.J dl.\r.:(1;1I 111~ (I t the d:l~li l" f.. ~ : ,-, .lLly ":I1 I1;'I1(~d. ';';/1" I,' , /Ji", S ! Il",11I 'u- III<l Jf III t ¥O l i;;lI ", r oil.", ",d .'ar !;,·. of Malthus believed contraceptives to be a vice, and only in the US was their sale open and regulated, albeit with the government warning, "For disease prevention only", a connotation that has stuck to this day. What really handicapped the condom throughout much of its history, however, wasn't disapproval so much as is its associa tion with the inhibition of pleasure. Madame de Sevigne, writing to her daughter in 1671, described it as "armour against enjoyment and a s pider web against danger", while Dr johnson's biographer, James Boswell , found only a "dull satisfaction" in using one. Although the vulcanization of rubber in 1884 allowed for the manufacture of mOre flexible, cheaper condoms, the rea l turning point didn't come until 1932 when the de velopment of latex technology allowed manu facturers to switch from thick rubber to thin latex wi thou t any loss of strength . The su bse quent issuing of condoms to troops during the Second World War finally ensured the revival of the condom's repu tation as both prophylac tic and contraceptive. Troops also found another use for the con dom - as a wrapping to keep gun barrels dry - thus giving birth to the idea of the condom as flexible accessory, a trend reflected today in our seemingly endless fascination for condom gimmicks ranging from mint-fragranced sheaths to fanny-ticklers and varieties which, like condom earrings, ultimately have nothing to do with sex at all. Nevertheless, the condom continued to suffer from misconcep tions about its effectiveness (a factor which had more to do with ignorance about how to Treble Vulcanised Rubber. " "CAPOTE use one than its actual failure rate) and with the advent of the pill the newly uninhibited young rejected the poor rubber johnny as old fashioned and furtive. It was only with the emergence of health concerns abou t the pill and fear of AIDS in the mid-Eighties thilt interest in the condom reo vived. By 1986 l3 percent of all contraceptive users employed condoms, making it the sec ond most popular method, after the pill at 21 percent. But it wasn't until August, 1987, when Richard Branson succeeded in getting the government to lift its ban on condom advertising on te levision, that the modern era of King Condom arrived. Although the move was meant to open the London Rubber Company's virtual condom monopoly to competition from Virgin's own Mates brand, LRC were the first to capitalize on the new rules by coining the definitive post-AIDS condom slogan - "Together you're safer with Durex" - used with the now famous Frankie Goes to Hollywood ' Power of Love' advert. The "safe-sex" prefix has stuck to the word 'condom' ever since and the result is that today as many people use the condom as the pill. And despite attempts by anti contraceptive campaigners like Victoria Gillick to discredit the condom by question ing its effectiveness against disease, it con tinues to catch on with the young. Among 16 to 17-year-olds it has now replaced the pill as the main form of contraception, a trend which is rapidly taking over the18- to 24-year-old age group as well (however, despite the expansion in condom sa les, LRC claims it retains a 90 percent share of the market). BLANCO." At the same time, as the safe sex message has got home we have moved away from doom-laden images of tumbling icebergs to the matter-of-fact message of the latest HEA ad, which shows Sheila Dawson, a worker at the LRC plant, putting the damn things onto a conveyor belt. The closing line is: "Keep Mrs Dawson busy. Use J condom." However, as the condom gains in social acceptance, there are still barriers to be bro ken. Many young men continue to have hang ups abou t going into a chemist to ask for one, while some complain, rather unbelievably, that they can' t find one that fits. Discussion of anal sex also remains taboo, despite the num bers of heterosexual practitioners and the availability of extra-strength condoms like Red Stripe which have been popular in the gay community for years. Given men's reluctance to accept respon sibility for contraception the impetus for the frank airing of these issues in future is likely to come from women, who already account for one in four condom purchases. A develop ment that could prove significant in this re spect is the planned launch later this year of Femidom, a female condom developed by Chartex Resources. A sort of cross between a Dutch cap and a sheath, Femidom can be inserted by women into the vagina in advance of sex, thus removing the last objection to the conventional condom - namely, that it inter rupts love-making. For once Madame de Sevigne would have heartily approved . • Condoms are available free of charge from family planning clinics. B LIT ;; 97 Photographs Hugues Roussas It’s not polite to masturbate in public... Bonnie Vaughan and Susannah Frankel on sexual etiquette 98 8 LIT Z When it comes to sex, there's really no such thing as absolute do's and don'ts. For some people there's nothing worse than 'wham bam thank you ma'am ', while for others anything's better than hours of win some foreplay followed by relentless hump ing, usually practised by those who have misinterpreted the myth that 'women take longer'. And while many men want a woman to buck and writhe in wanton ecstasy when she sits on his face, there are others who may feil[ for the safety of their dental work. Most women can't agree on this either: some feel too vulnerable and exposed when it comes to cunnilingus, while others are simply bored, and others again think nothing beats it. We all have our individual likes and dis likes, of course, so no two anxieties are ever the same. Moreover, anxiety and fear in them selves both play an integral part in the game of sex. Fear of rejection. Fear of failure. Fear of the unknown. Fear and anticipation: will we end up in bed together later? (The anticipa tion alone can be the sexiest part of sex.) And then, of course, there's fear of committing the unspeakable, the unpardonable faux pas fear of farting during orgasm, for example. Some people are so alarmed by the prospect of this happening that they are unable to relax and enjoy themselves . Others are more prag matic, masking the offending butt burp by crying out with wild abandon. And what about those cries of ecstasy? Have you ever considered that your partner may in fact have simply slipped a disc? Sex is about trial by fire. Leap in at the deep end, learn by your mistakes . Do whatever it takes. If you think you know it all already, more luck to you. If not, you may find some useful tips in our panels on sexual etiquette, running over the following pages. Mrs Penelope Grange from Little Rock, Arkansas, claimed to have been molested by a monster turtle ... Jon Wilde on strange sex "My own belief is that there is hardly anyone whose sexual life, if it were broadcast, would not fill the world at large with surprise and horror." - W Somerset Maugham At the age of 14, I suddenly became ~ Howard Sooley BLITZ 99 ~ aware of the complexity of human sexuality while witnessing a breathtaking public performance by a local lad known as "Springer" who achieved orgasm by swinging a turkey around so that its wings brushed the tip of his peniS . The turkey was apparently named Cyril. The unfortunate bird appeared to be asleep . Midway through the demonstration, Springer casually turned to the assembled crowd and uttered the immortal words, "Would somebody please pass me the cranberry sauce?" The craving for sexual variety is nothing new. From the beginning of recorded history, human beings evidently have been in pursuit of the ultimate sexual experience. In his celebrated 1928 study, Sex ill the New Stone Age, Rolf Rawlinson claims that neolithic hunters would achieve orgasm by inserting barley stalks into their erect members. The last 200 years have witnessed an increasing obsession with sexual fulfilment. In his'1988 book, Misfits : A Stlldy of Sexual Outsiders, Colin Wilson argues that although sexual deviancy has always been with us, it only truly began to proliferate in the 19th century. Wilson concludes that, with the invention of the modern lover, human beings learned to use their imagination far more than in previous centuries. Sex with animals has been condemned for thousands of years. In Leviticus, the prescribed punishment for a man or a woman who "lies with beast" was death . In the Middle Ages, in England , the animal victim was hanged alongside the human. The precise incidence of zoophilia in the 20th century is not known but according to the Kinsey report of 1953, about 8 percent of American men and 3 percent of women admitted to sexual behaviour involving an animal. Sex objects range from cattle to dogs, . even fish , snakes and insects . In H Greenwald's 1974 study, The Sex Life Letters, a lorry driver describes a shocking experience while delivering corn to a farm in Alabama: "Making a delivery one afternoon, I could find no one at home. So I started to look into some of the outbuildings to find someone to sign my delivery sheet. Hearing sounds coming from the barn, I approached it and as I passed the window I saw the farmer's wife bending over some hay, doing her best to guide the penis of a large dog into her vagina . After entry was effected the dog worked away with gusto, to the obvious and extreme pleasure of the lady..." In 1931, a Bellonese man of the Solomon Islands was sentenced to two years imprisonment for "sexual. violation of a tunny Ush" . In their 1973 essay, 'A Partial Analysis of a Perversion Involving Bugs', RJ Stolorow and HT Grand describe the case of a 25-year-old man who became sexually excited by squashing winged insects. In 1985, The Weekly World News reported the strange case of a Mrs Penelope Grange from Little Rock, Arkansas, who claimed to 100 B LIT Z have been molested by a monster turtle that crawled out of the sea while her husband was off in search of ice cream . "It was repulsive," she told the news paper. " It was as big as a medium-sized whale, with a carapace like a turtle's, a horrible head like a barrel, and two wings ." Mrs Grange would resurface again in 1989, this time claiming that she had been penetrated by a horned viper while hanging out her washing. The Weekly World News is never short of bizarre sex stories . In 1984, it reported that, on a flight from Miami to New York, a stewardess entered the cockpit to find the pilot performing fellatio on the copilot. The following year, they carried a story entitled 'No Extras Today Please' which involved a repairman who was called to a house in Louisiana to mend a refrigerator. He discovered that it contained milk bottles filled with human sperm and called the police. The owner of the house explained nonchalantly that "it tastes mighty fine with breakfast cereal" . It seems that, if it can be done or even if it can be imagined, then there will be a word for it. The pious young James Boswell used to reach sexual climax when climbing trees. He was so racked with guilt that he regularly contemplated self-castration. David Niven once confessed that he enjoyed his first orgasm while halfway up a sycamore . They would both have been interested to learn that 'dendrophilia' refers to a sexual interest in trees or vegetable life . In his 1965 book, Sexual Deviations, the aptly named Gerald Roaster cites the case of a man known only as The Fire Worshipper who suffered from pyrolangia. This refers to sexual arson , where the individual become s sexually excited by setting public buildings on fire. The Fire Worshipper, who lived in Toronto, claimed that he had his best ever orgasms after setting light to libraries. He had tried hospitals, police stations and supermarkets, but "it was never quite the same" . He told Roaster that his most intense experience occurred one afternoon in 1959 when he was helping the fire service, unsuccessfully, to put out the fire he had started. In his riveting book of wacky trivia, Man Sliffocated by Potatoes, William Marsano -describes a case of gastrophilia which involved a 21-year-old man from Illinois who was arrested after he allegedly dipped his penis into a jar of salad dressing at a K-Mart store. A similar case occured in 1984, involving a 40-year-old woman, a lso , curiously enough , from Illinois, who was arrested in a supermarket after being found masturbating with the aid of a frozen sausage. Botulinonia was apparently all the rage in Sweden in the mid-Sixties . This is a form of masturbation practised by women in which a sausage (usually prime pork) is smoothed, lubricated and heated before being introduced into the vagina in lieu of the male organ and manipulated to imitate coital CO.DO• • Anyone who isn't prepared to wear a condom Isn't worth the effort DO * Share equal responsibility for providing the condoms. It's passe to conSider it sexier if the woman carries them, or presumptuous if the man does. It's better to have too many than not enough you can always use them up, or play hearts With them (the winner gets heir deepest fantasy indulged) Be diplomatic Make it sexy Instead of Just an Issue; "ThiS is for both of us" IS better than "I'm using this because you could have AIDS" * D O . .... * Be more Interested in the wrapping paper than the present. Texture, senSitivity factor and reliability are more important than colour or speCial features There's no need to obsess on the gimmICky Side of sex or to adorn the male appendage as if It should be on the Christmas table. However, if you must. black but not yellow or green; blackberry but not lemon or mint Wear your condom on your sleeve. Over·confidence can be deeply unattractive Be too rough If It doesn't go on eaSily, It'S inside out or stili in the pac~et. If It stili doesn't go on eaSily, marry him Flush them down the tOilet * * * • • • aCC • • •OR••• Leather gloves, mirrors, ridlllg boots, cock rings, showerheads, belts, Wellington boots, handcuffs, Vibrators, dildos, whips, canes, KY jelly, baby oil, undernpe bananas, Swarfega, candles (hot and cold), hats (also see O • •L • •• ) movement . Feel a little tripsolagnia coming on? This refers to sexual desire aroused by having the hair shampooed . Actirasty? A pleasurable sexual lassitude aroused by exposure to the sun . Kleptolangia? Sexual excitement derived from stealing an object. Gerbillophilia? Don't ask the Pe t Shop Boys, who have always denied rumours that their name derives from the bizarre practice of inserting a living rodent into the rectum. The lexicon of sexual aberration offers an exhaustive range of possibilities, ranging from the absurd to the monstrous. My favourite story is provided by Mikhail and August Stern. In their 1981 book, Sex ill the Soviet Uniol'l, they describe a biz arre incident seen on their retu rn from a summer holiday in the Soviet Caucasus . To their surprise, the ve hicle in front began to zigzag, its driver paying no attention to the Sterns' hooting . ~ Steve Speller sex ~ The reason for the vehicle's erratic behaviour was soon explained. Its driver was watching "a militiaman directing traffic at the intersection which we were approaching. His pose was, to say the least, bizarre; he had taken his member out of his trousers and was squeezing it at its base with his right hand . Left, right', stop : the officer was directing the traffic with his penis, which was red as a pepper" . Not surprisingly, the militiaman ended up in court. When asked by the judge to explain his behaviour, he confessed that he was somewhat liquored up at the time . "j just felt a funny urge come over me," he remarked. "j vaguely knew what j was doing but, as I wasn't harming anyone or anything, j thought, 'What the hell!'" • "The French believe in oysters and sea urchins, the Spanish, octopus stewed In its own ink ..." Malu Halasa on aphrodisiacs "I was a courtesan in the city Byzantium. I am Kallirrhoe , experienced in all the a rts of - Tomb inscription voluptuousness ." Sucking mangos can make you randy. So can artichokes, chestnuts and carrots stewed in milk, according to an Arabic recipe . Raw egg has also gained a reputation as a sexual stimulant, either with brandy and honey or flavoured with cinnamon or pepper. If the refrigerator is in your boudoir, look no 102 B LIT Z further than the vegetable drawer for a convenient aphrodisiac. The word, 'aphrodisiac' - derived from the goddess of love, Aphrodite - refers to natural substances that enhance sexual desi re or pleasure . Like the goddess who rose out of the briny foam, romance can be found not only on the high seas but underneath them. Both Lord Byron and Casanova swore by seafood as the ultimate aphrodisiac. During the reign of Louis Xv, Marquise Pompadour cooked filet of sole 11 la Pompadour before each passionate interlude, and perfumed her parlour with the aroma of cooking, which smelled, to some, of devotion . On the amorous shores of the Mediterranean, each country boasts a recipe for love . The French believe in oysters and sea urchins, the Greeks, prawns, the Spanish, octopus stewed in its own ink. Bouillabaisse, or fish soup, is universally considered a bestower of sexual prowess, along with shellfish, shark, cod, salmon, seaweed and sea water. These are not exactly old wives' tales. Seafood is rich in vitamin A, which nourishes mucous membranes that lubricate sexual organs, vitamin B-1 (thiamine), which supplies hormones to the pituitary glands that stimulate the sex glands, and vitamin 0 , known to increase sexual appetite. Clinical, perhaps, bu t this is the biological chemistry of heavy pe tting. Medieval and ancient herbalists have been documenting the herbs of Venus for the last 2,000 years. Whether leaf, flower or vine, acacia buds, aloes, balm of Gilead, cyclamen, elecampane, lavender, meadowsweet , mistletoe, myrtle or rose, to name but a few, all have fascinated humankind looking for herbal remedies, love potions or spells . In Europe, basil has been the stuff of love charms, while in Haiti, it is the venerable plant of the voodoo nymphomaniac sex goddess Erzuile . According to Dr Culpeper, it inflames women, bu t has the opposite cooling effect on men. To heat up a man in the winter of his sexual years use mint, while honeysuckle induces dreams of an erotic and prophetic nature. Astrologer, magician and herbalist Pietro Lamia - editor of Gostik AIN, a lunar, astrological and magical quarterly from France - is always being asked for romantic remedies . "Usually by women," he admits. j met him when I was looking for a psychic. Our rapport was immediate . There are, he maintains, two types of love elixir, and they are "political". The first, for the independent woman, kindles abandoned sex between equals . "Lilith was the first wife of Adam who left him because he tried to dominate her. An old recipe passed through female descent, oil of Lilith, made from essential oils, is one of the best potions, which attracted Solomon to Sheba ." And it's easy to see why. Musky, mysterious, my vial of Lilith is saved only for very special occasions. Discreet women say no more. The second, more traditional remedy would set feminists aflame, and not with paSSion. It belongs to Eve, the woman formed from Adam's rib, and is for women obsessed. " Love potions are essentially about in equality," Lamia explains . "Eve wants to bind her man to her because that's how some women gain power, through the men they possess. Even though obsessive love ends badly, " he shrugs, "everyone still wants for it." In the early hours of the morning , herbalists in China gather herbs and roots during certain quarte rs of the moon. From the East come wondrous aphrodisiacs of myrrh, jasmine and the cure-all ginseng root. Green ...ALKING Sex shouldn't be a great, silent thrash in the dark, With each partner relying on the powers 0 telepathy or osmosis to know whether or not they're pleasing the other. Communication is ital. Use your voice as well as your whole body to express your needs. Tell your partner when you like what they're doing If in doubt, ask, but don't turn It into the third degree. (Who do you think you are? Woody Allen?) There's talking and there's ralkmg. Your voice can be used to stJmulate as well as to guide. Talk about your fantasies Tell your partner what you're dOing What you're going to do. Sometimes it's not what you say but how you say it DO.AV * I want you . I want you now * I need you * , an't live without you * Oh yes, yes, yes! * You're so beautiful * ,love you * Marry me * I want you to have my babyll want to have your baby DON'....AV * I'm only interested in you for the sex * Can we get Ihis over with? I'm having my haemmorhoids treated first thing * Did you ever hear the one about... ? * Chnst, where's my hairpiece? * Watch out for my boil. (Who do you think you are? Nigel Kennedy?) * * * 'love you Marry me I want you to have my baby/l want to have your baby ~ Peter Calvin B LIT Z 103 se" et.quette ORAL • • • Oral sex is probably one of the most diffi cult sexual activities to ta lk about and people are particularly divided and insecure as to what they shou ld and should not do. Oral sex should be an act of wo rship. Im merse yourself. There's no point do ing it unless you're going to e njoy it. Be innovative and experiment: hot and cold liqu ids, whipped cream, honey, cinna mon, fruit, ice cubes, cold jelly, chocola te fin gers, butterscotch Angel Delight. Tricky but rewarding . . . .LLA...IO DO * Use tne epiglottis to the full * Suck as if you're seeding grapes, or as if you're sucking barley suga r * Suck hard * Suck softly * Be gentle with the balls and don't neglect them * Use you r hands * Develop a taste for semen. You've ~ ginger cooked with orange peel and stirred into ginseng essence removes the consequenc es of sexual excesses - an Oriental version of Resolve for the over-sated . By itself, ginseng also guards against impotence. In the healing arts of acupuncture and shiatsu, the meridian that governs sexual e xcitemel'lt and fertility is the kidney. Th e really desperate forego treatment altogether, and medicate themselves with black rhino horn or deer antler. In this age of animal awareness, more acceptable and available are traditional remedies of yin yang ts' ao, a species of barrenwort, or chung wei tze, Siberian motherwort first cited by Dioscorides Pendanius, who described 600 plants in his work on medical botany in the 1st century AD. But , for the man or woman intent on working a little sorcery of their own for the one who looks like they are about to get away, old-fashioned solutions sometimes have to do. Waiter. bring me a rope and some fish SOUpl. grow n up eating Am brosia Creamed Rice; su rely it's not so d ifferent Reme mber: there s no such thing as giving bad head * DO..' ... * Be too amb l ious. (Who do you think you are 7 Linda Lovelace 7 Besides, spl uttering can rUin the atmosphere.) Him: thrust too hard. (Not everyone's Linda Lovelace) Bite (u nless specifically requested) Talk with your mouth full Spit out the semen in disgust. OK, so maybe it does taste more like cold tapioca than creamed rice: dispose of it discreetly Blow * * * * CU .... ILI .. au. DO * * * * "Only the beautiful can bungle with confidence" Michael Bracewell on sexual ineptitude ,II DO.. ' ... Poke fUriously With your tongue Make a big show out of pick ing the pu bic hairs from you r mouth : the truly nonchala nt WOU ld use It as dental floss Her : yawn Her : suffocate yuur partner Blow * * ** * 104 B L IT Z leaming tofly/Before I try - to spread my wi/Jgs/ Why does/J 't somebody teI/me these thi/lgs7" And then again, later: "My Moth er /l ever taught mel Teacher l1ever tallght me/Blit IIO W that love has caught me/What am [ 's'posed to do now 7/0I1," etc. What indeed. As sung by a woman, this sprightly confession could be seen as a coy hymn to virginity and respectability. While its theme is one of innocence, its undertone is decidedly erotic, and in this much it is typical of songs of the period . In those days, when sex was ' birdies' and ''I' m a little butterfly, looking for a flower" (pronounced flail), the notion of sexual ineptitude was more or less a part of the mating ritual. Men were depicted as strong and paternal - and they had learned a thing or two in the army; women, on the other hand (unless they were 'fast' or'a bit of a sporn, played a role in which Wide-eyed anticipation was mingled with girlish mod esty and a becoming ignorance of the facts of life . Such was the popular image of courting couples and newlyweds . This comfoding state of affairs, however, was brought to a close by George Formby, the clown who wanted to be a crooner. Formby gave a voice to male sexual ineptitude, and who can ever forget such wonderful narrative lines as: "At five to eight a girl she wakes/At eight o'clock a bath she takes/At five past eight me ladder breaks/WhCll ['m clea/Jing windows ... " Formby * Ta ke you r time. Remember the inner thighs and stomach. It's not a case of 'first one to clamp the clit gets a gold medal ' Be ge ntle Treat the labia With respect. Never chew or wrench ofJen wClntonly Use you r fingers a popular song in their repertoire which was entitled (saucily) 'Why Doesn't Somebody Tell Me These Things?' A jaunty foxtrot, fea turing a remarkable penny whistle solo, this erie de coeur un behalf of the sexually inept was sung by June Malo. Itcontained the following significant verse: "Oh, I'm like a birdie who's Back in the Thirties, when Jack Hylton and The Savoy Orpheans used to broadcast their Saturday night dances from the famous hotel after which they were named , there was was the direct ancestor of Morrissey in some ways, and in these days of using the history of popular culture as a kind of spiritual dressing-up box it is easy to see how a particu lar form of chic has resulted from the cult of the sexual bungler. Endearing sexual inepti tude (like stylish bad dressing) is, however, the privilege of the attractive. I daresay that Mel Gibson, for instance, or Madonna, or any number of media-feted sex symbols, could di s play the sexual techniqu e of a boxing kan garoo and still be internationally desired. Only the beautiful can bungle with confi dence; for the rest of us, 'getting one's kit off' must remain a test of character and a war of nerves. But what, precisely, constitutes sexual in eptitude? Stephen Heath , in his persuasive book The Sexual Fix, advances the theory that we are all (or nearly all) sexually inept. In his wonderful chapter 'Wflile Millicent Buckled and Writhed' he explains how the bombard ment of our lives by stylized images of sexual triumph can be seen as the main constituent of sexual fear. So long as the men in the adverts have cheekbones like wing mirrors and can reduce (note the word ' reduce') a woman to a sighing, complicit seeker-after- ~ Phil Ward ~ orgasm simply by taking their sunglasses off; and so long as the women (honey-tanned and perfectly proportioned) can be depicted (in the same adverts) as somehow knowledge able to the point of being prematurely grati fied, then the received image of sexual success will remain firmly (and dangerously) in the hands of skilful stage managers. This re ceived image has provided copy for maga zines such as Cosmopolitan for an awfully long time. So long as theories of 'multiple orgasm' and 'the G-spot' and 'Does Your Man Make You Faint?' were put forward, then people could write in (expressing their anxiety) and thus make the notion of global sexual nirvana seem plausible. Due in part to intelligent work by various enlightened editors, and to the general questioning of sexual activity which AIDS has forced into play, the cutting edge of these myths has become slightly blunt. We are beginning to realize that the notion of Great Sex is largely an invention of advertising agencies which plays on the idylls of erotic romance, which are as old as poetry itself. (The great Greek poets - Theocritus for instance - were masters of the erotic idyll, mingling the arguments of the seducer with softly pornographic descriptions of sexual triumph.) But theory and literature do little to comfort the men or women who believe themselves to be sexually inept. Premature ejaculation, 'fri gidity' and general clumsiness will go a long way towards spoiling the already delicate stuff of romance. One can, of course, make a comedy out of it - many have; or one could indulge in one's sense of uselessness, and cultivate an image of erotico-romantic mor bidity. But not everyone wishes to pursue those courses . A surprisingly large amount of people simply want to join in with what they perceive as being the universal enjoyment of sex. They wish to display their love - or they don't want to be lonely. It is for them (the tired and the worried and the plain) that the fear of not performing correctly bites hardest. And it is for them that the role of love (sentimental, perhaps, and platitudinous in the eyes of both the intellectuals and the party animals) must KI• •ING et.quette Neller underestimate the power of the kiss. It is a skill worth perfecting before all others. Kissing can be sexier than sex. DO * Dribble * Remember that short, soft kisses can be just as sexy as deep, soulful ones * Explore; necks, feet, eyes, ears, backs of knees.. DON'''' * Drool * Swallow the tong ue * Clash teeth * Cough 106 B L I T Z play its greatest part. Love, one likes to think, will make a molehill out of the mountain of sexual ineptitude. But what if it doesn't? Larkin, from his poem 'Letter to a Friend About Girls' (1959): "My mortificatioll at your pushovers/Your mystification at my feckless ness/ Everything proves we play in separate leagues ." • "We've al'l of us slapped the meat in our time, we've all had a wrist tango" John Hind on masturbation Where did it all begin? No idea. But I have a pristine memory of being caught trouserless at age eight by Mrs W, a neighbour, while her son and I rubbed ourselves against her laundry floor. I can see her now, towering in the doorway, a smirk finally surfacing across her face; the same path since (and we're talking twenty-plus years here). After the Mrs W incident I tended to engage solo and with a touch more discretion; these being the reasons, presumably, that there are very few firm figures on masturbation. The sexologists believe that "many" males rediscover autoeroticism at around eight years of age (we'll come to that 're-' later). They further calculate that by 17 at least 96 percent of males have discovered their 'paw's best pal'. They seem to have made no studies on visua~ / mental stimuli used. My masturbatory history - and indeed my masturbation - is a bit of a haze. I recall with some delight my first emission of seminal fluid, and my first of semen - but I don't remember how or when. One needs good reference points. For example, I have a friend whose parents (so they confirm) had a "surprisingly erotic" mirrored bathroom fitted in 1973, and a locked garage in 1974; thus he can build a much clearer cock cronology. My personal theory is that the bulk of males begin masturbating seriously (the fingers and thumb 'hand-shandy' technique) at about 11. During my first term at a comprehensive school there was a girl who, each Monday morning, had boys retrieve their stolen tie from within her blouse. One particularly coarse girl left a used tampon on my coat peg. It was slightly too much for me. Then there is the unconscious aroma emanating from the 'other' changing room . Personally, I blame the women. I remember one girl who claimed during afternoon break that she'd been manipulated to orgasm by a fellow pupil during the day's third-year Year RE class. Although I don't believe it now (and I'm sure she doesn't), at the time it worked wonders for my hormones. To spend your entire secondary education musing on sex (with occasional breaks for humour) is, surely, chronic ... but nevertheless excellent practice for the brain's fantasy compartments. If you're 12 or 13 and the girls (or whoever) in your school make you so hogging horny that you don't know your Belgian rainfall from your Norwegian forestry yields, then the very least one can do is spend as much time as possible in the evening passing creative messages back and forth between the brain and the wrist. And, of course, these things are habit-forming. "Only art you can control , " said Woody Allen. 'J\rt .. . and masturbation" . And I've never been too good at sketching. Let's face it - I'm a wanker. I'm a wanker, and so are you. We've all of us slapped the meat in our time (an unpleasant phrase), we've all had a wrist tango (slightly better), we've all self-abused (a technical term). We shouldn't beat about the bush about beating about the bush. If we were really honest about masturbation we wouldn't howl "You wanker!" at those who irritated us, but "You non-wanker!" I imagine it's vaguely possible one of you may be in palm-paradise at this very moment. I have a comedian friend who claims to masturbate six, seven or eight times per day, sometimes standing with binoculars at his seventh-floor window. He is not joking. When I told a 34-year-old married male acquaintance that I was writing on masturba tion, he responded rather over-briskly, "Well, it doesn't hurt anyone, does it? And another thing, and another thing ... it's the only exercise I get." Yet still there is no listing for this pastime in Roget's Thesaurus . I have both the 1923 and the 1990 editions and masturbation is nowhere . Wanking is a little like eating alone in a restaurant - it's not entirely acceptable public ~ Merton Gauster B LIT Z etiquette • • •TU• • •TION Solo· it's not polite to masturbate in public, In pnvate, it's up to you Mutual remember that mutual masturbation is safe sex DO Be Invenll\le Write your name on her walls MaSTurbate him with both hands as if you we'e giving someone a leg up Rernemcer what they do IS what they want done ** * * DON'T * Give up * Snrff your hands afterwards * Use sharp or breakable objects. (Who do you think you are? Fatty Arbuckle * Even think about Inserting live animals J) ~ 108 behaviour, unless you're taking notes on a pad at the same time. Adults don't talk about adult masturbation because to be 'adult' is to have a constant supply of 'the real thing' available; Jnd adults don't like to think of their children masturbating because it disturbs the concepts of innocence. Yet the sexologists report children actually begin touching their g e nitals from a fe w months of ag e , "seemingly for pleasure". Parents who stop them are actually the people who first introduced the children to these 'se xual feelings' in the first place, by washing them and changing their nappies. So exactly what roles privacy and guilt, Jnd combinations thereof, play in the masturbation game are hard to telL In one sense wanking is a physical/mental/moral negation of the function of sex (reproduction); there again it actually feels more like a celebration of sex. Whichever, I'm told masturbatory pleasures are greater for Roman Catholics. I have a Catholic friend who claims to have gone into hanky heaven on Christmas Day, seven or eight years ago, almost immediately after hearing a speech by the Pope in which he decried masturbation. I have another friend - whom we can only call 'N' - who's most dramatic memory of twanging the wire is in a caravan in Cornwall in 1975. N thought his parents had gone for a walk on the cliffs, but - mid-manipulation he glanced up to see his wide-eyed mother watching him through the caravan window. He says her only words were a gentle, "Oh, don't rock the caravan, dear". But exactly in what way her (lack of) reaction exacerbated or deflated the fabric of his masturbatory future he'll not theorize. He will only admit to once losing a ping-pong ball in his rectum for a few hours ("Once it's in, it's in") and putting a stalked flower down his penis which would not so easily come out. One still hears it suggested that "too B LIT Z frequent masturbation can make a man impotent and a woman frigid". (Why not vice versa?). I have looked into literature on the subject and it seems that the "too frequent" figure here is in the region of a couple of dozen a day. Although women of course do not masturbate. Only joking. But this is a trick y one. Desmond Morris is at pains to point out that female parts are "more tucked away". Robert Chartham says that "many" females begin masturbating at 17, bu t that the "highest incidences" (when only 50 percent of females ha ve discovered it) are around the age of 28 (rising to 62 percent discovery at 50). Does this suggest that female desires are sublimated more easily than male ones, that femal e s arc more secretive than men, or just that I'm reading the wrong books? Where's Oprah vVinfrev whe n you need her? Let's consult Alex Comfort, another man. "While boy s need only be told to enjoy masturbation without guilt," he explains, "adolescent girls should be actively encouraged." Positive discrimination for female teen masturbators? Now we're talking. Perhap s the ultimate question must be: Ii people had unlimited sexual activity available to them from outside sources (and sexually transmitted diseases didn't exist), would they still tip-toe into the lav once in a while to engage in a surreptitious hand-shandy? I have conducted a poll of eight people on this matter and none say "no" ... only "yes", ''I'm sorry" and "get fucked". Bu t here's Robert Chartham to spoil everything: "No mCttter what the masturbatory technique involved," he writes, "none can match the pleasures and relief from tension that normal sexual in tercourse provides". What a non-wanker. • "Pornography dehumanizes everybody. Pornographers hate women, they hate themselves ..." Kim Bowen on pornography The woman's lips inch their way up and down the penis, her cheeks hollowing in and out as if she were sucking an icepop. Bucking slightly, the man takes her head in his hand and urges her closer. Pulling out of her mouth, he prompts her to bend over before him and, squeezing his palm full of baby oil, he massages his cock, presses it against the woman's anus and, grunting with exertion, rams it deep inside her. She gasps in pain. In this particular scenario the woman is playing a drunk. She subjects herself to this because the man is waving a bottle of liquor just out of her reach. Soon he withdraws and ejaculates on her back. We have the proof the man has climaxed, we have seen the sperm. Clearly the woman has not climaxed, nor will she. She has not been touche d kindlv or caressed once. She is a sperm rece ptacle. This is a scene from Nasty Girls, one of two porn videos I procured from a Soho sex shop to watch with a group of female friends. Certain kinds of porn are illegal in the UK, but it is a piece of cake to buv under the counter. Each film costs £30, and can be exchanged for a mere tenn e r. Watching pornography is not dissimilar to watching a bullfight. Two creatures are made to face each other for the gratification of an eager paying audience. More often than not, the contest ends in the conquest and debas ement of on e of them. The women who appear in porn films are mirrors of pornographers' desires. They groan, shriek, beg, pant, scream as they writhe in sexual emotion and lust which patently is not their own. In ancient Greece a pome was the lowest of whores, a prostitute despised by the more socially acceptable courtesans, obliged to go with anybody who would have her. 'Pornography' literally means writing about whores. It is difficult not to be fascinated by the genre: it is unden iably sexual, forbidden, dirty. explicit, a million miles away from my own Catholic girlhood. Ultimately, however, I found viewing these films profoundly depressing and boring. As one of the group assembled commented, "The idea is brilliantly sexy, but they aren't," Technically the films are appalling - " A complete balls-up," as one friend put it. The edits chop and flicker, continuity is non existent, the music is either frantic or sheer ~ David Harrison ~ 110 shopping mall. The lighting is suicidaL the locations are sparse, hideous, depressing. Flesh is butcher-shop pink and meaty. Generally the women involved are attractive, yet almost without exception the men are hideous . Cravats are sported at jaunty angles, hairpieces are in place, fat guts predominate. The men almost always have monolithic cocks which will invade every available onscreen orifice . In the second film, Bodyfor Sale, a prostitute rubs money on her naked body, groaning, "Ieh lieben" ("I love it"), and 'services' several clients. She has sex with two exceptionally unattractive men: one sporting a massive penis; the other a minute one which never becomes erect - he merely masturbates in a hunched position while his friend fucks the woman for twenty-five minutes. She has sex with a woman, who is the only client she actually kisses. Most grotesquely she has sex with a fat, bald man of around 60, who fucks her for at least ten minutes with an expression of resolute detachment, looking exactly as if he were driving a taxi in bad weather. The entire scenario failed to inspire erotic stimulation among those of us watching but it was, according to one, "medically enriching". The Sixties gave women the option of a freer sexuality, and some women were encouraged to enjoy porn, to revel in its sensuality as men do . This is an accepable concept as long as all who appear are equal. This is rarely the case, as the scenario is almost always the same: the woman sucks the man, then sometimes he fucks her, other times he just comes in her face . Nine Lives Hath My Love is one porn film from a series made for women by women under the auspices of former porn star Candida Royalle. Unlike the grotesquely clinical visual assault of Nasty Girls and Body for Sale, this is more like a soap opera with sex . By comparison to the earlier films, it is decidedly non-pornographic. Significantly, the lighting is natural and the actors' bodies are in better shape. When the woman performs a blow job, she appears to be enjoying it, in contrast to the aggressive face fucks so favoured in male porn. If the participants are not lovers offscreen, they use condoms. Penetration is shown, but more sympathetically and less gratuitously; the camera is not jammed up their backsides . Yet while it is more palatable than the other type, in the end it too becomes pedestrian, unsexy and quite foolish. In its own way, Royalle's answer to unacceptable pornography is every bit as pointless as the male version. Pornography is about exploitation. The actors and actresses are exploited, the fluffers (the girls who hang around the film sets to keep our heroes hard) are exploited, black men are exploited for penis size, black women for animalistic desires, Oriental women for ' tightness'. But most of all the customer is exploited. It's a business that floats on shame, which preys mercilessly on human desires B L IT Z "today's watcher is tomorrow's doer". Scraping the thick curd at the bottom of the barrel, the final abasement of life, beauty and sexuality is achieved by the snuff genre. It is possible to buy films of men sodomizing infants . It is possible to see films in which women are opened from breast to vagina wi th a hunting knife and left to die . When questioned, Scotland Yard remains unconvinced that the murders in snuff films are genuine, but in one sense the point remains the same - these nightmares, real or realistic, are created for someone's delectation. The abused or murdered people are nothings, they are nobodies. They are sperm receptacles, just as Samantha Fox and Maria Whittaker are both sperm receptacles . Porn people are one-dimensional fantasy figures separated from the spirit, obliged to inspire someone else's inadequacies. As one man I know opined, "Some of the truly grotesque films allow people to feel better than the people on the screen. Perhaps that's why it's so attractive." Pornography dehumanizes everybody. Pornographers hate women, they hate themselves; by watching it one is participating in the big, menacing hate back machine. Porn enables its viewers to detach themselves, to distance themselves from the real problems (and joys) of real sex . You don' t have to feel, or think - you are untouched in any way you want to be. While serving his prison sentence for rape, Sixties Black Liberation leader Eldridge Cleaver wrote Soul on Ice, in which he states: "1 know that by following the course which I have charted I will find my salvation ... The price of hating other human beings is loving oneself less." These words could be applied like balm to the pornographer's wounding works . • and weaknesses . It seems that some men have allocated their sexuality about as much importance as their ability to sink forty-five pints of lager a night. Such men provide an arena for the rank abuse of human beings (and of women, in particular) in pornography. Bernie Meadon of the Obscene Publications Squad points out, however, that in most pornographic scenarios, the actresses are fully cooperative . "But the bottom line is," he told me, "you don't get women jumping out of bushes attacking men. With regard to the danger to women, the porn actress isn't helping her fellow women." As long as the attitudes exemplified and arguably promoted by pornography exist, women who already live curtailed lives ("Don't wear low-cut dresses" , "Don't walk down that road at night" , "I think your make up's a bit tarty, dear", "Make sure all the doors are locked in the car", "Look under the car before you get in it if you're in a lonely car park", "Don't have eye contact with men on trains", "Develop tunnel vision", "Lock your windows if you live on the ground floor", ad infinitum) will continue to fear that which they have always feared . Rape. As long as women are devalued by pornography, depicted as sex-hungry halfwits bearing the full responsibility for all of mankind's sexuality, (and yes, this includes the Page Three Girl), we are not safe . In Understanding Sex ual Violence, a study of convicted rapists, Diana Scully reminds us that the origins of sexual violence are in the structural subordination of women. Advocates of pornography cling to the 'rape is an act of violence' argument, but for some men rape is sex. Rape is a means of sexual access to a woman who is otherwise not available, and according to Bernie Meadon • TuRN·a..... Video Minicabs Feminine sprays Scented deodorant That stale "one-bath-a-week-and-proud-of-it" whiff Red and flesh-coloured underwear Fatal asphyxiation (Who do you think you are? Robert Chalmers?) Braying and bellowing Or total, deathly silence Fluted briefs and V-fronts r Her knickers (him) Large tits on men Hairy fronts and hairy backs (devil's patch) Plucked eyebrows Popsox Men in rubber Sex at bedtime Getting shitfaced Smegma Sex with your socks on InSisting on re-enacting the entire Kamasutra Eyes reSOlutely closed (praying) B Lewis Mulatero movies. Maria Schneider, however, did herself no favours by appearing in this vehicle for two mons ter egos. After the sodomy-by-butter scene her career slipped into oblivion. 3. Blue Velvet Kyle MacLachlan - in a role that foreshadowed that of FBI Agent Cooper - investigates a severed ear and ends up a voyeur to, and then participant in, Isabella Rosselini's sado-masochistic relationship with the oxygen mask-fixated Dennis Hopper. Shocked as much for its beauty as its horror. 4. The Postman Always Rings Twice More sex in the kitchen, but don't attempt to try this one at home. Jack Nicholson banged Jessica Lange up and down so feverishly on the kitchen counter that she must have spent a week picking the splinters out of her arse. Mind you, it delivered where the Lana Turner original simply teased. Blue Velve', "Suck this" SEXY CELLULOID 1. Body Heat The film in which Kathleen Turner burnt up the sheets and, finally, the summer house as part of a laby rinthine plot that had William Hurt and the audience gasping for relief by the end. The Florida humidity is palpable. Gave a whole new mean ing to 'steamy'. 2. Last Tango in Paris Bertolucci's movie about an anony mous coupling in an empty Paris apartment saw Brando at his narcissistic best and signalled the actor's comeback after too many bad 112 B LI T Z 5. Making It (Les Valseuses) Bertrand Blier's two-fingers at bourgeois sensibilities sees Gerard Depardieu making it with Miou Miou as often as the plot will allow without losing its way. At one point the couple forsake a girl who can't have an orgasm for a woman just out of prison on the assumption that she must be dying for it (she is). Compulsive viewing. 6. Don't Look Now Supposedly the best sex scene ever filmed; certainly one which broke down many barriers with the British Film Censors. Unfortun ately, Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie's sexual high jinks were cut for the television version and few unexpurgated prints remain, leaving Nicolas Roeg's thriller to be best remember ed for its super natural evocation of a death foretold against the backdrop of Venice's alleyways and canals. 7. Betty Blue The film which established Beatrice Daile's vital statistics, and hence her claim to starlet status, has her and co-star Jean-Hughes Anglade screwing their brains out from dawn to dusk. Ironically, Daile's the one that ends up mentally unhinged and the film ends with Anglade putting her out of her misery. 8. Ai No Corrida (The Realm of the Senses) Oshima's erotic masterpiece too k the Japanese fascination with death to new pinnacles but shocked audiences worldwide with its portrayal of a couple who experi ment with strangulation to heighten their mutual orgasms. When the man dies in mid-ejacu lation, the woman cuts offhis organ, never to be parted from her lover again. 9. sex, lies and videotape Steven Soderbergh's impressive debut seemed to capture the mood of post-AIDS heterosexual society with its account of a sexual impo tent (James Spader) who videotapes the repressed confessions of his friend's wife (Andie MacDowell) and then runs off with her. Made voyeurs of us all. 10. Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex... Woody Allen 's seven sketches parodying a sex manual contain some of the funniest sex gags ever filmed and see Allen give one of his finest performances - as a sperm poised for ejaculation. Other high lights include Allen's send-up of a TV panel game, Whats My Perver sion? and Gene Wilder's memorable encounter with a shee p. and laid on lavish banquets where prizes were awared to guests who cavorted most often with the invited whores. He was a foremost practitioner of simony - the buying and selling of religious favours - and once sold a nobleman permission to commit incest with his sister. legend has it that Rodrigo himself was no stranger to this sin, one of his sons being the product of sex with his sister, lucrezia . .I .daar Hoover Hoover's obsession with the FBI is a classic case of transference, a cautionary monument to the dangers of suppressing the libido. Probably a virgin until his death, Hoover made up for it by probing into the lives of anyone he deemed "subversive", and threw tantrums when his agents failed to turn over explicit photographs of copulating commies for him to paw over. Hoover's one regret was not that he had missed out on sex but that the FBI could not prosecute in cases of "oral-genital intimacy". Jean Harlow: No bral DEAD SEXY ... AN HARLOW Who knows how many men Jean Har,low might have had had she not died tragically of uremic poisoning at the ripe age of 26. Despite her reputation for promiscuity and dyed-blonde pubic hair, Harlow, like Monroe later, was not particula~ly lucky in love. Her second husband, PaullBern, was so ashamed of his tiny penis he shot himself and her third marriage lasted only eight months. At one point Harlow disguised herself in a black wig and began picking men up incognito at screenings of her own movies. But she was at her sexiest on screen where she was the first Hollywood actress to appear regularly without a bra. GUY de Maupa• • ant One of the most prodigious lovers in modern French history, Maupassant could reputedly make his member erect at will. He also boasted that he was capable of multiple orgasms and could have sex up to twenty times in a night. a facility that invariably ensured his partner reached climax too. Prouder of his sexploits than his books, Maupassant once had a bookkeeper accompany him to a Paris brothel where it was recored he "had six girls in an hour". But syphillis eventually got the better of him and he died a raving lunatic, aged 42. .Iall'le. Bo. . .ell Dr Johnson's biographer was a member of that small but select band of aborophiliacs. In his pubescent years Boswell's partners were trees, which he assaulted by masturbating against their trunks. Although he considered this a "small sin", fornification remained an even "larger sin" until he discovered whores. A male chauvinist, and stingy with it, he treated prostitutes abominably, but suffered the consequences when they repeatedly infected him with gonorrhoea. lirne.t Hell'llng. .ay There is a story that F Scott Fitzgerald was so concerned about the small size of his penis that he consulted his pal Hemingway, who, on comparing sizes, assured him he had a perfectly normal member. The irony is that by all accounts Hemingway had a remarkably small one himself ("the size of a .33 shell", according to his friend Sidney Franklin), but could never bring himself to admit it. Perhaps that explains why in his writing he cultivated such a macho image. lirrol IIlynn Cinema's great swashbuckler was obsessed with a fear of castration, having once been attacked by a knife-wielding Indian rickshaw driver. Despite his sexual stamina this prevented Flynn really enjoying sex, although he did like to observe his guests having it away through a one way mirror he had installed at his home. Twice acquitted of raping teenage girls, his sexual urges are adequately described by the phrase for which he is best remembered: "in like Flynn". pope Alexander VI Rebuked by Pope Pius II for appearing at an orgy in his cardinal's robes, Rodrigo Borgia went on to become the most sinful pope in history. At the height of his power he kept a permanent harem Charlie Chaplin Chaplin's endearing on-screen pursuit of women was no act. Endowed with an unusually 'large organ, he revelled in his reputation as the "eighth wonder of the world" and relentlessly pursued his co-stars with it. He particularly enjoyed deflowering virgins, for which his rule was "the younger, the better". Lita Grey, for 'instance, first grabbed Chaplin's attention when she was six. Taking her under his wing he groomed her for stardom, finally pouncing on her when she was 15. However, ChaDlin's reputation finally got the better of him and in 1944 he was hounded out of the US as a "debaucher". Catherine .. Unlike England's "virgin queen" Russia's empress revelled in sex and enjoyed countless liaisons while her impotent husband Peter was alive, despite the difficulties of periodically having to conceal from him the resulting pregnancies. Catherine didn't even begin to hit her peak until after she was 43 when she began a tumultuous affair with a cavalry officer. When the passion died he became her pimp, inspecting lovers for signs of venereal disease before ushering them into her bedchamber. Contrary to rumour, Catherine did not die attempting copulation with a horse, but of a stroke. Marie Stope. Despite her association with birth control Marie Stopes had perilously little first-hand knowledge of sex. She didn't get her first kiss until she was 24, and then from a Japanese researcher who was culturally opposed to it. It took five more years for Stopes to discover masturbation and when she finally married at 35 she discovered her husband was impotent. It wasn't until her second marriage that Stopes, aged 40, finally lost her virginity. Unfortunately, her new husband proved to be almost as disastrous as the first and later granted Stopes permission to carryon extramarital affairs. There is no evidence she ever took up the offer. B LIT Z 113 ereatjvese~ Art, more than any other creative endea,'our, has concerned itself with the erotic muse. There is evidence of erotic art associated with fertility rites as earl'y as 30,000 8C; the Ancient Egyptians, Greek. and Romans decorated vases, bowls and walls with highly stylized erotic images in celebration of sexuality and for sexual instruction as did the Japanese who created the "pillow book", depicting the various positions with which newly married couple. might experiment. In the repressively religious Dark Ages erotica died out com pleteiy, only to resnrface in the Renaissance when the human form was again openly explored in the guise of presenting classical or biblical episodes and figures. From that time until the I)resent day there has always been some form of erotic art, although even in the 20th century few artists hm'e unashamedly created erotica for its own sake, nervous of being considered to ha,'e crossed the boundary into pornography. Nevertheless for such artists as Klimt, Schiele, ModigUani, 80nnard, Picasso and others the human body - usually female - was a constantly recurring subject. More recently Hockney restored the male nude to its position as a respectabfe object of study after centuries of embarrassed self-consciousness. Now, however, in a climate of such moral sensithity that the Royal Academy's recent Egon Schiele exhibition could not attract major sponsorship because of its "strong" content, the lines between erotica and pornography are - in the eyes of certain sections of the SEXY PAGES 1. Lady Chatterley's Lover Lawrence's tale of Connie's tryst with a gamekekeeper wasn't finally unbanned in the UK until 1960 after a notorious obscenity trial, Today, however, Lawrence's frank language seems anodyne and one wonders what all the fuss was about. Joe Orton: King of Cruising 2. Moll Flanders The frank heroine of Daniel Defoe's novel spends twelve years as a whore, is married five times (once to her own brother) and imprisoned in t he colonies before repenting in the nick of time to die a rich and happy old woman. Quite a debut for social realism in the English novel, 3. Lolita Nabokov's forthright tale of a lecherous lodger who seduces his landlady's pre-pubescent daughter with disastrous results led to the coining of a new term for any budding starlet with precocious sex appeal, 4. The White Hotel DM Thomas's first novel mixed Freudian psychoanalysis with 114 B LIT Z Gustav Klimt: treading a thin line between erotica and pornography? public, at least - being blurred. Anti such major .. ontemp~rary artists as Jeff Koons who, in his recent work with Cicciolina nse. his reputation as an artist to create pornography, only provoke further conlro,'ersy. erotic fantasy and ideas from modern history to startling effect. One of the most sexually arousing novels ever written. 5. The Swimming Pool Library Without question one of the most erotic books of recent years, what ever your sexual tastes, Alan Hollinghurst's diary-style tale of briefencounters and dark secrets in modern London showed gay sex to be - for the most part - enor mously enjoyable, and must have tempted even the most determined heterosexual male. 6. The Orton Diartelll In the gents, behind a bus stop, with a dwarf in Brighton... Joe Orton seemingly did it everywhere and with anything, a remarkable achievement considering these diaries just cover the lurid period between December 1966 and Orton's death in August 1967. One can only speculate as to Orton's lifetime cruising total, 7. Nothing Natural Picking up where the zipless fuck left off, Jenny Diski turned the assumptions of two decades of women's liberation on its head with this tale of a feminist who finds herself plunged into a sado masochistic relationship that forces her to own up to her own repressed rape fantasies. An advance for women, and men. 8. Les I..iaisons Dangereuses Seduction at its most cynical. Choderlos de Laclos' novel has a timeless appeal and seems almost modern in its depiction of immor ality and sex. Also a play and a film. How long before the T-shirt? 9. Homemade This clinical account of a young boy's determination to lose his virginity by bedding his sister is recounted so naturalistically by lan McEwan that it's only at the end of his story one realizes a taboo has been broken. Incest at its best. 10. Story of the Eye Georges Bataille's staggering novella runs the gamut of sexual excesses without ever stopping to draw breath. Within the space of sixty pages the narrator and his irrepressible paramour Simone have their way with bulls, priests, corpses, saucers of milk, flies, eyeballs and anything else that takes their fancy.